Toronto Hydro has partnered with HydroStor Incorporated to connect the world’s first UnderwaterCompressed AirEnergy Storage system to Toronto’s electricity grid. HydroStor uses compressed air and the pressure of water to run its system, and produces zero emissions.
Toronto Hydro will evaluate the system during a two-year pilot project to see how well it performs.
For more information on how we're modernizing the grid visit www.torontohydro.com/gridinvestment.

published:17 Nov 2015

views:42324

Every time you visit a web page or send an email, data is being sent and received through an intricate cable system that stretches around the globe. Since the 1850s, we've been laying cables across oceans to become better connected. Today, there are hundreds of thousands of miles of fiber optic cables constantly transmitting data between nations.
Subscribe to BI: Science - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9uD-W5zQHQuAVT2GdcLCvg
----------------------------------------­----------
Follow BI Video on Twitter: http://bit.ly/1oS68Zs
Follow BI Video On Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1bkB8qg
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/
----------------------------------------­----------
Business Insider is the fastest growing business news site in the US. Our mission: to tell you all you need to know about the big world around you. The BI Video team focuses on technology, strategy and science with an emphasis on unique storytelling and data that appeals to the next generation of leaders – the digital generation.

published:16 Sep 2015

views:572442

Get more info (and buy a PowerRay) HERE: https://store.us.powervision.me?ref=59cea99db6094
Explore the ocean with this NEW under-water Drone called the PowerRay from the company PowerVision. This little guy can hang out underwater for 2 hours without needing to recharge, and can find fish, drop bate, and more importantly take some awesome video with its 4K stabilized camera.
Like I mention in the video, this makes a great underwater tool, BUT I would like it to have a side motor to push it along parallel to a subject that I am trying to film. It is amazing what technology can do. Exploring the Isla De Las mujeres, near Cancun, with an Underwater drone is pretty incredible.
Check out The Jurgys Vlog of our day!: https://youtu.be/mDApXzwA_UA
WhatsInside's Underwater Drone Vlog: https://youtu.be/xImdTUUzrso
More Power Vision stuff:
Instagram https://www.instagram.com/powervision.usa/
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/powervisionme/
Youtube http://www.youtube.com/c/PowerVisionGlobal
Awesome iPhone Tool Kit: http://amzn.to/2xu8VBL
Green Pry tool: http://amzn.to/1Tu57pI
Metal phone opening tool: http://amzn.to/1WdOFv0
The camera I used to film this video: http://amzn.to/2p7GtkX
The Lens I used for this video: http://amzn.to/1QOXDw2
Wide angle lens: http://amzn.to/2qiYM4u
And this Metabones adapter: http://amzn.to/2iZ67Ty
This is the drone I use: http://amzn.to/2joH00G
*Follow me for updates!*
Instagram: http://instagram.com/zacksjerryrig
Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1U4bQqv
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ZacksJerryRig
Snapchat: http://bit.ly/1UAb2Fq
GooglePlus: https://bit.ly/1YyKice
JerryRigEverything assumes no liability for property damage or injury incurred as a result of any of the information contained in this video. JerryRigEverything recommends safe practices when working with power tools, automotive lifts, lifting tools, jack stands, electrical equipment, blunt instruments, chemicals, lubricants, expensive electronics, or any other tools or equipment seen or implied in this video. Due to factors beyond the control of JerryRigEverything, no information contained in this video shall create any express or implied warranty or guarantee of any particular result. Any injury, damage or loss that may result from improper use of these tools, equipment, or the information contained in this video is the sole responsibility of the user and not JerryRigEverything. Only attempt your own repairs if you can accept personal responsibility for the results, whether they are good or bad.

published:29 Sep 2017

views:1837044

The OceanRenewablePower Company is making undersea power generation a reality - SOLIDWORKS. When ChrisSauer's team at Ocean Renewable Power Company set out to build one of the world's first underwater turbines, they were doing something that had never been done before. SolidWorks ® helped turn their vision into reality.
See more stories like these on our Born to Design website! http://oak.ctx.ly/r/g1rp
Subscribe to our channel: http://goo.gl/z3rQfT
Visit our website: http://www.solidworks.com/
Follow us!
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/solidworks
Twitter: https://twitter.com/solidworks
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/5003792/

published:30 Oct 2013

views:6971

DID YOU KNOW there are over 250 internet cables under the oceans of the world?!?! We CUT IN HALF a cable to see the amazing cross section! Watch Nat and Lo's awesome video here: https://www.youtub...

published:16 Dec 2016

views:1749180

Google is reinforcing its underwater fibre-optic cables to protect against future shark attacks
Google is reinforcing its private underwater fibre-optic cables with an extra layer of protective material in order to protect its 100,000 miles of cables from sharks.
Sharks and other fish are attracted to the cables, thought by some to be due to the electromagnetic signals emitted by the lines, but they are easily damaged. The cables already have existing protective materials designed to shelter them from the various dangers of the environment, but will now be coated with a 'Kevlar-like' material to provide even more protection.
Fibre-optic cables are made of strands of glass, and are thus much less durable than copper cables. Google wants to prevent its own cables from sustaining further damage after seeing underwater surveillance footage of sharks biting the cables.
IT Pro has contacted Google for more information on the plans and will update the story as soon as we know more.

published:15 Aug 2014

views:1348339

An Australian company has been working on a system that uses underwater buoys to convert sea waves into zero-emission energy and desalinated water.
Australian firm CarnegieWave Energy has been developing a system called CETO, which aims to utilise sea waves to generate power. Steel-made buoys that can currently generate 240 kilowatts are the main part of the system.
At the Australian naval base HMAS Stirling, three buoys are placed 11 kilometres apart. The buoys are less susceptible to extreme weather damage, while underwater waves are sufficient to generate power.
The buoys' pumps drive the high pressure water to an onshore power plant via a subsea pipe. The high pressure water spins the turbines, which then generate zero-carbon electricity.
The CETO system can be used to power a desalination plant as well. High pressure water can be utilised to remove salt from seawater through a permeable membrane in a process called reverse osmosis.
The Australian company believes that the cost of electricity generated by the CETO system will be competitive with diesel if it is deployed at a large scale.
----------------------------------------­---------------------
Welcome to TomoNews, where we animate the most entertaining news on the internets. Come here for an animated look at viral headlines, US news, celebrity gossip, salacious scandals, dumb criminals and much more! Subscribe now for daily news animations that will knock your socks off.
Visit our official website for all the latest, uncensored videos: http://us.tomonews.net
Check out our Android app: http://bit.ly/1rddhCj
Check out our iOS app: http://bit.ly/1gO3z1f
Stay connected with us here:
Facebook http://www.facebook.com/TomoNewsUS
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Google+ http://plus.google.com/+TomoNewsUS/
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-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "Crying dog breaks the internet’s heart — but this sad dog story has a happy ending"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4prKTN9bYQc
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

published:04 Apr 2015

views:60414

From amazing art to a mysterious train, these are 13 of the most bizarre underwater discoveries.
Subscribe to Talltanic http://goo.gl/wgfvrr
10. The Cancun Underwater Museum has over 500 underwater sculptures dedicated to the Art of Conservation. The unique attraction offers divers a spectacular view of the statues that can be seen from a glass bottom boat. The museum began its venture in Cancun in 2009 and was completed in 2013. Each figure was made from a PH neutral cement, coral, seaweed and algae. The reason for this is to help benefit and protect coral reefs. Coral reefs can be created from sunken ships that fall to the bottom of the ocean floor. Creating statues are used to help save the ocean by creating a new way to grow coral reefs.
9. MS Zenobia was a Swedish ferry boat that sank on her maiden voyage in 1980 near Larnaca, Cyprus. After passing through the Strait of Gibraltar in route to Athens Greece the captain began to notice problems associated with steering. Once they arrived at Larnaca, the problem occurred again and the computerized pumping system was forcing additional water into the adjacent ballast tanks because of a software error. A few days after the ferry sank and sank in Larnaca Bay. Now it is a favorite dive site for visitors in Cyprus.
8. From land, the swimming whole Angelita looks like an average swimming hole. It is located in the Yucatan in Mexico. Divers have to plunge down to nearly 100 feet underwater to see the river. The “UnderwaterRiver,” is a cenote that is just an optical illusion produced by a cloud of hydrogen sulfide intermingling with the surrounding saltwater.
7. USS Oriskany is nicknamed the “Mighty O”. Was one of the small amount of Essex-class aircraft carriers finished only after World War II for the United States Navy. The ship was called for the Battle of Oriskany through the Revolutionary War. The aircraft carrier saw years of combat through both the Korean and Viet NamWars before the carrier was purposely sunk to become part of the world's largest artificial coral reef.
6. Several miles off New Jersey’s coast there lie an unanticipated site below the ocean’s surface. Two trains were found in 1985 but no one knows for sure how they got there. The most excepted theory behind how the locomotives got there is that in the 1850's the trains were being transported from the place they were built to their new home which was likely a rail yard. Because the locomotives were small, they could have been pushed overboard into the sea. Now the trains give an interesting spot for divers.
5. Yonaguni Monument is located off the coast of the Ryukyu Islands, in Japan. The monument is connected to a large rock mass in the ocean and believe to have been deposited over 20 million years ago. The main monument is a rectangular formation which measures 490 by 130 ft. The rock formation is made out of moderate to very fine sandstones and mudstones. Scientist who have studied the formation have concluded that some of the features could be manmade. One scientist believes that the site could be fragments of the legendary lost continent of Mu.
4. The SS President Coolidge was an ocean liner from the U.S. The large ship saw its nautical days finish after yielding to mines near the large military base on Espiritu Santo. Now the ship is used as a dive site. Divers can see a mostly intact cruise liner and a military ship. They can swim through numerous parts of the ship. There are guns, cannons, Jeeps, a stunning statue of "The Lady", chandeliers, and a mosaic tile fountain. Coral grows around the ocean liner where the divers can view sea creatures such as reef fish, barracuda, sea turtles and moray eels.
3. The Titanic, was the world’s largest cruise ship sank on her maiden voyage on April in 1912. The ship was touted as “unsinkable” and was supposed to be one of the safest ships ever built in history. She collided with an iceberg, and nearly half of the passengers lost their lives due to the inadequate supply of life boats on board.
2. The LionCity is a real life Atlantis located in China. The city was purposely flooded to make way for a build hydroelectric power station in 1959. Unfortunately, the city was forgotten but remains largely intact for being underwater for fifty years. Currently, there are plans in the works for divers because they like to use the metropolis to use as a tourist site.
1. SS Thistlegorm merchant ship that was sunk during World War II in the Red Sea. She set to sell for Alexandria, Egypt when two bombs were dropped on her from above. The bombs struck the stern of the ship, and it quickly sank. The ship and holds everything from vehicles, motorcycles, ammunition and other weaponry. Now the SS Thistlegorm is used as a recreational diving site.

published:29 Mar 2016

views:6481892

Voith Hydro (www.voith.com) developed a turbine for the utilization of tidal currents. Animation produced by Kral GmbH (www.kralgmbh.at).

published:23 Jun 2009

views:188269

Who wants to take an underwater train ride to China?! China is planning to build a high-speed rail connecting China and the continental United States that will tunnel under the 125 mile stretch of ocean beneath the Bering Strait. And that's just one of three other wacky ambitious plans they have that completely disregard the reality of the natural environment!
Subscribe for more China Uncensored:
http://www.youtube.com/ntdchinauncensored
Make sure to share with your friends!
______________________________
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ChinaUncensored
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/ChinaUncensored
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+NTDChinaUncensored/
______________________________
MOBILE LINKS:
China'sUnderwaterAtlantis
http://e.ntd.tv/1gC1F62
China's Water Crisis
http://e.ntd.tv/KluWGJ
Is Revolution Brewing in China?
http://e.ntd.tv/QRGKUE
Question and Answer
http://e.ntd.tv/1k5ceCe

Power Company

The Power Company was a team of professional superheroes-for-hire in the DC Comics universe. The team, created by Kurt Busiek and Tom Grummett, first appeared in JLA #61, (February 2002). They subsequently starred in an epoynmous series that ran for eighteen issues, from April 2002 to September 2003, also written by Busiek.

Fictional team history

Josiah Power was one of America’s best lawyers until his meta-gene was triggered during the alien Invasion by the activation of the Gene Bomb.

Following the untimely public activation of his metagene in the courtroom, attorneyJosiah Power is dismissed from his law firm. Power had little interest in becoming a traditional costumed hero, but it became readily apparent that he could not continue to practice law without undue public attention. He capitalizes on his professional experience to organize a for-hire team of heroes much along the lines of a law firm. Their very first mission as a team is against the East Asian criminal organization known as the Black Dragon Society. They successfully defuse a hostage situation initiated by the Society and returned to their base of operations.

Ocean Renewable Power Company

Ocean Renewable Power Company (ORPC) is a tidal energy company based in Portland, Maine. It completed an eight-month pilot project to generate energy using the technology in 2013.

After five years of planning, the company installed an underwater turbine to use the tides to generate clean, renewable energy. The unit is nearly 100 feet long and sixty feet below the water's surface. The project, located in Cobscook Bay, on the west side of Eastport, Maine
transmitted the first electricity ever delivered to an electricity grid from an ocean resource in North or South America. The only comparable project uses a dam in Nova Scotia. ORPC completed an eight-month pilot project to generate energy from its Cobscook Bay project.

The turbines are a cross-flow design in which the axis of rotation is perpendicular to the flow of water and shaped like stretched out and twisted water wheels and work on the same principle: as the tide comes and goes the turbine spins, generating electricity, which is then transmitted through a buried power cable to a small on shore station. And from there it's fed to the public electrical grid. The equipment's below water. There are marker buoys for the project area. The technology doesn't just apply to tidal, it applies to river and offshore ocean currents, such as the Gulf Stream.

Underwater Energy Storage in Toronto

Toronto Hydro has partnered with HydroStor Incorporated to connect the world’s first UnderwaterCompressed AirEnergy Storage system to Toronto’s electricity grid. HydroStor uses compressed air and the pressure of water to run its system, and produces zero emissions.
Toronto Hydro will evaluate the system during a two-year pilot project to see how well it performs.
For more information on how we're modernizing the grid visit www.torontohydro.com/gridinvestment.

2:23

Animated map shows the undersea cables that power the internet

Animated map shows the undersea cables that power the internet

Animated map shows the undersea cables that power the internet

Every time you visit a web page or send an email, data is being sent and received through an intricate cable system that stretches around the globe. Since the 1850s, we've been laying cables across oceans to become better connected. Today, there are hundreds of thousands of miles of fiber optic cables constantly transmitting data between nations.
Subscribe to BI: Science - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9uD-W5zQHQuAVT2GdcLCvg
----------------------------------------­----------
Follow BI Video on Twitter: http://bit.ly/1oS68Zs
Follow BI Video On Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1bkB8qg
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/
----------------------------------------­----------
Business Insider is the fastest growing business news site in the US. Our mission: to tell you all you need to know about the big world around you. The BI Video team focuses on technology, strategy and science with an emphasis on unique storytelling and data that appeals to the next generation of leaders – the digital generation.

7:18

This Under Water Drone Conquers the Ocean... in 4K!

This Under Water Drone Conquers the Ocean... in 4K!

This Under Water Drone Conquers the Ocean... in 4K!

Get more info (and buy a PowerRay) HERE: https://store.us.powervision.me?ref=59cea99db6094
Explore the ocean with this NEW under-water Drone called the PowerRay from the company PowerVision. This little guy can hang out underwater for 2 hours without needing to recharge, and can find fish, drop bate, and more importantly take some awesome video with its 4K stabilized camera.
Like I mention in the video, this makes a great underwater tool, BUT I would like it to have a side motor to push it along parallel to a subject that I am trying to film. It is amazing what technology can do. Exploring the Isla De Las mujeres, near Cancun, with an Underwater drone is pretty incredible.
Check out The Jurgys Vlog of our day!: https://youtu.be/mDApXzwA_UA
WhatsInside's Underwater Drone Vlog: https://youtu.be/xImdTUUzrso
More Power Vision stuff:
Instagram https://www.instagram.com/powervision.usa/
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/powervisionme/
Youtube http://www.youtube.com/c/PowerVisionGlobal
Awesome iPhone Tool Kit: http://amzn.to/2xu8VBL
Green Pry tool: http://amzn.to/1Tu57pI
Metal phone opening tool: http://amzn.to/1WdOFv0
The camera I used to film this video: http://amzn.to/2p7GtkX
The Lens I used for this video: http://amzn.to/1QOXDw2
Wide angle lens: http://amzn.to/2qiYM4u
And this Metabones adapter: http://amzn.to/2iZ67Ty
This is the drone I use: http://amzn.to/2joH00G
*Follow me for updates!*
Instagram: http://instagram.com/zacksjerryrig
Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1U4bQqv
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ZacksJerryRig
Snapchat: http://bit.ly/1UAb2Fq
GooglePlus: https://bit.ly/1YyKice
JerryRigEverything assumes no liability for property damage or injury incurred as a result of any of the information contained in this video. JerryRigEverything recommends safe practices when working with power tools, automotive lifts, lifting tools, jack stands, electrical equipment, blunt instruments, chemicals, lubricants, expensive electronics, or any other tools or equipment seen or implied in this video. Due to factors beyond the control of JerryRigEverything, no information contained in this video shall create any express or implied warranty or guarantee of any particular result. Any injury, damage or loss that may result from improper use of these tools, equipment, or the information contained in this video is the sole responsibility of the user and not JerryRigEverything. Only attempt your own repairs if you can accept personal responsibility for the results, whether they are good or bad.

4:32

The Ocean Renewable Power Company is making undersea power generation a reality - SOLIDWORKS

The Ocean Renewable Power Company is making undersea power generation a reality - SOLIDWORKS

The Ocean Renewable Power Company is making undersea power generation a reality - SOLIDWORKS

The OceanRenewablePower Company is making undersea power generation a reality - SOLIDWORKS. When ChrisSauer's team at Ocean Renewable Power Company set out to build one of the world's first underwater turbines, they were doing something that had never been done before. SolidWorks ® helped turn their vision into reality.
See more stories like these on our Born to Design website! http://oak.ctx.ly/r/g1rp
Subscribe to our channel: http://goo.gl/z3rQfT
Visit our website: http://www.solidworks.com/
Follow us!
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/solidworks
Twitter: https://twitter.com/solidworks
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/5003792/

6:19

What's inside the Undersea Internet Cable?

What's inside the Undersea Internet Cable?

What's inside the Undersea Internet Cable?

DID YOU KNOW there are over 250 internet cables under the oceans of the world?!?! We CUT IN HALF a cable to see the amazing cross section! Watch Nat and Lo's awesome video here: https://www.youtub...

1:22

Shark Bites Fiber Optic Cables Undersea 15.8.2014

Shark Bites Fiber Optic Cables Undersea 15.8.2014

Shark Bites Fiber Optic Cables Undersea 15.8.2014

Google is reinforcing its underwater fibre-optic cables to protect against future shark attacks
Google is reinforcing its private underwater fibre-optic cables with an extra layer of protective material in order to protect its 100,000 miles of cables from sharks.
Sharks and other fish are attracted to the cables, thought by some to be due to the electromagnetic signals emitted by the lines, but they are easily damaged. The cables already have existing protective materials designed to shelter them from the various dangers of the environment, but will now be coated with a 'Kevlar-like' material to provide even more protection.
Fibre-optic cables are made of strands of glass, and are thus much less durable than copper cables. Google wants to prevent its own cables from sustaining further damage after seeing underwater surveillance footage of sharks biting the cables.
IT Pro has contacted Google for more information on the plans and will update the story as soon as we know more.

An Australian company has been working on a system that uses underwater buoys to convert sea waves into zero-emission energy and desalinated water.
Australian firm CarnegieWave Energy has been developing a system called CETO, which aims to utilise sea waves to generate power. Steel-made buoys that can currently generate 240 kilowatts are the main part of the system.
At the Australian naval base HMAS Stirling, three buoys are placed 11 kilometres apart. The buoys are less susceptible to extreme weather damage, while underwater waves are sufficient to generate power.
The buoys' pumps drive the high pressure water to an onshore power plant via a subsea pipe. The high pressure water spins the turbines, which then generate zero-carbon electricity.
The CETO system can be used to power a desalination plant as well. High pressure water can be utilised to remove salt from seawater through a permeable membrane in a process called reverse osmosis.
The Australian company believes that the cost of electricity generated by the CETO system will be competitive with diesel if it is deployed at a large scale.
----------------------------------------­---------------------
Welcome to TomoNews, where we animate the most entertaining news on the internets. Come here for an animated look at viral headlines, US news, celebrity gossip, salacious scandals, dumb criminals and much more! Subscribe now for daily news animations that will knock your socks off.
Visit our official website for all the latest, uncensored videos: http://us.tomonews.net
Check out our Android app: http://bit.ly/1rddhCj
Check out our iOS app: http://bit.ly/1gO3z1f
Stay connected with us here:
Facebook http://www.facebook.com/TomoNewsUS
Twitter @tomonewsus http://www.twitter.com/TomoNewsUS
Google+ http://plus.google.com/+TomoNewsUS/
Instagram @tomonewsus http://instagram.com/tomonewsus
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "Crying dog breaks the internet’s heart — but this sad dog story has a happy ending"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4prKTN9bYQc
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

6:17

Bizarre Underwater Discoveries

Bizarre Underwater Discoveries

Bizarre Underwater Discoveries

From amazing art to a mysterious train, these are 13 of the most bizarre underwater discoveries.
Subscribe to Talltanic http://goo.gl/wgfvrr
10. The Cancun Underwater Museum has over 500 underwater sculptures dedicated to the Art of Conservation. The unique attraction offers divers a spectacular view of the statues that can be seen from a glass bottom boat. The museum began its venture in Cancun in 2009 and was completed in 2013. Each figure was made from a PH neutral cement, coral, seaweed and algae. The reason for this is to help benefit and protect coral reefs. Coral reefs can be created from sunken ships that fall to the bottom of the ocean floor. Creating statues are used to help save the ocean by creating a new way to grow coral reefs.
9. MS Zenobia was a Swedish ferry boat that sank on her maiden voyage in 1980 near Larnaca, Cyprus. After passing through the Strait of Gibraltar in route to Athens Greece the captain began to notice problems associated with steering. Once they arrived at Larnaca, the problem occurred again and the computerized pumping system was forcing additional water into the adjacent ballast tanks because of a software error. A few days after the ferry sank and sank in Larnaca Bay. Now it is a favorite dive site for visitors in Cyprus.
8. From land, the swimming whole Angelita looks like an average swimming hole. It is located in the Yucatan in Mexico. Divers have to plunge down to nearly 100 feet underwater to see the river. The “UnderwaterRiver,” is a cenote that is just an optical illusion produced by a cloud of hydrogen sulfide intermingling with the surrounding saltwater.
7. USS Oriskany is nicknamed the “Mighty O”. Was one of the small amount of Essex-class aircraft carriers finished only after World War II for the United States Navy. The ship was called for the Battle of Oriskany through the Revolutionary War. The aircraft carrier saw years of combat through both the Korean and Viet NamWars before the carrier was purposely sunk to become part of the world's largest artificial coral reef.
6. Several miles off New Jersey’s coast there lie an unanticipated site below the ocean’s surface. Two trains were found in 1985 but no one knows for sure how they got there. The most excepted theory behind how the locomotives got there is that in the 1850's the trains were being transported from the place they were built to their new home which was likely a rail yard. Because the locomotives were small, they could have been pushed overboard into the sea. Now the trains give an interesting spot for divers.
5. Yonaguni Monument is located off the coast of the Ryukyu Islands, in Japan. The monument is connected to a large rock mass in the ocean and believe to have been deposited over 20 million years ago. The main monument is a rectangular formation which measures 490 by 130 ft. The rock formation is made out of moderate to very fine sandstones and mudstones. Scientist who have studied the formation have concluded that some of the features could be manmade. One scientist believes that the site could be fragments of the legendary lost continent of Mu.
4. The SS President Coolidge was an ocean liner from the U.S. The large ship saw its nautical days finish after yielding to mines near the large military base on Espiritu Santo. Now the ship is used as a dive site. Divers can see a mostly intact cruise liner and a military ship. They can swim through numerous parts of the ship. There are guns, cannons, Jeeps, a stunning statue of "The Lady", chandeliers, and a mosaic tile fountain. Coral grows around the ocean liner where the divers can view sea creatures such as reef fish, barracuda, sea turtles and moray eels.
3. The Titanic, was the world’s largest cruise ship sank on her maiden voyage on April in 1912. The ship was touted as “unsinkable” and was supposed to be one of the safest ships ever built in history. She collided with an iceberg, and nearly half of the passengers lost their lives due to the inadequate supply of life boats on board.
2. The LionCity is a real life Atlantis located in China. The city was purposely flooded to make way for a build hydroelectric power station in 1959. Unfortunately, the city was forgotten but remains largely intact for being underwater for fifty years. Currently, there are plans in the works for divers because they like to use the metropolis to use as a tourist site.
1. SS Thistlegorm merchant ship that was sunk during World War II in the Red Sea. She set to sell for Alexandria, Egypt when two bombs were dropped on her from above. The bombs struck the stern of the ship, and it quickly sank. The ship and holds everything from vehicles, motorcycles, ammunition and other weaponry. Now the SS Thistlegorm is used as a recreational diving site.

5:25

Ocean Energy - Tidal Current Turbine

Ocean Energy - Tidal Current Turbine

Ocean Energy - Tidal Current Turbine

Voith Hydro (www.voith.com) developed a turbine for the utilization of tidal currents. Animation produced by Kral GmbH (www.kralgmbh.at).

5:39

China's Underwater High-Speed Train to America | China Uncensored

China's Underwater High-Speed Train to America | China Uncensored

China's Underwater High-Speed Train to America | China Uncensored

Who wants to take an underwater train ride to China?! China is planning to build a high-speed rail connecting China and the continental United States that will tunnel under the 125 mile stretch of ocean beneath the Bering Strait. And that's just one of three other wacky ambitious plans they have that completely disregard the reality of the natural environment!
Subscribe for more China Uncensored:
http://www.youtube.com/ntdchinauncensored
Make sure to share with your friends!
______________________________
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ChinaUncensored
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/ChinaUncensored
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+NTDChinaUncensored/
______________________________
MOBILE LINKS:
China'sUnderwaterAtlantis
http://e.ntd.tv/1gC1F62
China's Water Crisis
http://e.ntd.tv/KluWGJ
Is Revolution Brewing in China?
http://e.ntd.tv/QRGKUE
Question and Answer
http://e.ntd.tv/1k5ceCe

The Longest Underwater Tunnel | China's Future MEGAPROJECTS: Part 5

China is building the world’s longest underwater tunnel beneath the Bohai Sea--at 76 miles long it will pass through two deadly earthquake fault zones, will be longer than the current first and second-ranked underwater tunnels combined and will cost $42 billion.
Subscribe to TDC for more videos like this:
https://www.youtube.com/TheDailyConversation/
More information on the Bohai SeaTunnel:
https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Bohai_Strait_tunnel
Like our page on Facebookhttp://www.facebook.com/thedailyconversation
Join us on Google+
https://plus.google.com/100134925804523235350/posts
Follow us on Twitter
http://www.twitter.com/thedailyconvo
Video created by Bryce Plank

SeaGen - Sea Generation Tidal Turbine

Underwater Energy Storage in Toronto

Toronto Hydro has partnered with HydroStor Incorporated to connect the world’s first UnderwaterCompressed AirEnergy Storage system to Toronto’s electricity grid. HydroStor uses compressed air and the pressure of water to run its system, and produces zero emissions.
Toronto Hydro will evaluate the system during a two-year pilot project to see how well it performs.
For more information on how we're modernizing the grid visit www.torontohydro.com/gridinvestment.

published: 17 Nov 2015

Animated map shows the undersea cables that power the internet

Every time you visit a web page or send an email, data is being sent and received through an intricate cable system that stretches around the globe. Since the 1850s, we've been laying cables across oceans to become better connected. Today, there are hundreds of thousands of miles of fiber optic cables constantly transmitting data between nations.
Subscribe to BI: Science - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9uD-W5zQHQuAVT2GdcLCvg
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Follow BI Video on Twitter: http://bit.ly/1oS68Zs
Follow BI Video On Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1bkB8qg
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/
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Business Insider is the fastest growing business news site in the US. Our mission: to tell you all you need to k...

published: 16 Sep 2015

This Under Water Drone Conquers the Ocean... in 4K!

Get more info (and buy a PowerRay) HERE: https://store.us.powervision.me?ref=59cea99db6094
Explore the ocean with this NEW under-water Drone called the PowerRay from the company PowerVision. This little guy can hang out underwater for 2 hours without needing to recharge, and can find fish, drop bate, and more importantly take some awesome video with its 4K stabilized camera.
Like I mention in the video, this makes a great underwater tool, BUT I would like it to have a side motor to push it along parallel to a subject that I am trying to film. It is amazing what technology can do. Exploring the Isla De Las mujeres, near Cancun, with an Underwater drone is pretty incredible.
Check out The Jurgys Vlog of our day!: https://youtu.be/mDApXzwA_UA
WhatsInside's Underwater Drone Vlog: https:/...

published: 29 Sep 2017

The Ocean Renewable Power Company is making undersea power generation a reality - SOLIDWORKS

The OceanRenewablePower Company is making undersea power generation a reality - SOLIDWORKS. When ChrisSauer's team at Ocean Renewable Power Company set out to build one of the world's first underwater turbines, they were doing something that had never been done before. SolidWorks ® helped turn their vision into reality.
See more stories like these on our Born to Design website! http://oak.ctx.ly/r/g1rp
Subscribe to our channel: http://goo.gl/z3rQfT
Visit our website: http://www.solidworks.com/
Follow us!
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/solidworks
Twitter: https://twitter.com/solidworks
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/5003792/

published: 30 Oct 2013

What's inside the Undersea Internet Cable?

DID YOU KNOW there are over 250 internet cables under the oceans of the world?!?! We CUT IN HALF a cable to see the amazing cross section! Watch Nat and Lo's awesome video here: https://www.youtub...

published: 16 Dec 2016

Shark Bites Fiber Optic Cables Undersea 15.8.2014

Google is reinforcing its underwater fibre-optic cables to protect against future shark attacks
Google is reinforcing its private underwater fibre-optic cables with an extra layer of protective material in order to protect its 100,000 miles of cables from sharks.
Sharks and other fish are attracted to the cables, thought by some to be due to the electromagnetic signals emitted by the lines, but they are easily damaged. The cables already have existing protective materials designed to shelter them from the various dangers of the environment, but will now be coated with a 'Kevlar-like' material to provide even more protection.
Fibre-optic cables are made of strands of glass, and are thus much less durable than copper cables. Google wants to prevent its own cables from sustaining further d...

An Australian company has been working on a system that uses underwater buoys to convert sea waves into zero-emission energy and desalinated water.
Australian firm CarnegieWave Energy has been developing a system called CETO, which aims to utilise sea waves to generate power. Steel-made buoys that can currently generate 240 kilowatts are the main part of the system.
At the Australian naval base HMAS Stirling, three buoys are placed 11 kilometres apart. The buoys are less susceptible to extreme weather damage, while underwater waves are sufficient to generate power.
The buoys' pumps drive the high pressure water to an onshore power plant via a subsea pipe. The high pressure water spins the turbines, which then generate zero-carbon electricity.
The CETO system can be used to power a des...

published: 04 Apr 2015

Bizarre Underwater Discoveries

From amazing art to a mysterious train, these are 13 of the most bizarre underwater discoveries.
Subscribe to Talltanic http://goo.gl/wgfvrr
10. The Cancun Underwater Museum has over 500 underwater sculptures dedicated to the Art of Conservation. The unique attraction offers divers a spectacular view of the statues that can be seen from a glass bottom boat. The museum began its venture in Cancun in 2009 and was completed in 2013. Each figure was made from a PH neutral cement, coral, seaweed and algae. The reason for this is to help benefit and protect coral reefs. Coral reefs can be created from sunken ships that fall to the bottom of the ocean floor. Creating statues are used to help save the ocean by creating a new way to grow coral reefs.
9. MS Zenobia was a Swedish ferry boat t...

published: 29 Mar 2016

Ocean Energy - Tidal Current Turbine

Voith Hydro (www.voith.com) developed a turbine for the utilization of tidal currents. Animation produced by Kral GmbH (www.kralgmbh.at).

published: 23 Jun 2009

China's Underwater High-Speed Train to America | China Uncensored

Who wants to take an underwater train ride to China?! China is planning to build a high-speed rail connecting China and the continental United States that will tunnel under the 125 mile stretch of ocean beneath the Bering Strait. And that's just one of three other wacky ambitious plans they have that completely disregard the reality of the natural environment!
Subscribe for more China Uncensored:
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Make sure to share with your friends!
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China's Water Crisis
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published: 17 May 2014

MyStartup.Live w/ Thomas Peters of Undersea Energy

The Longest Underwater Tunnel | China's Future MEGAPROJECTS: Part 5

China is building the world’s longest underwater tunnel beneath the Bohai Sea--at 76 miles long it will pass through two deadly earthquake fault zones, will be longer than the current first and second-ranked underwater tunnels combined and will cost $42 billion.
Subscribe to TDC for more videos like this:
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Video created by Bryce Plank

Toronto Hydro has partnered with HydroStor Incorporated to connect the world’s first UnderwaterCompressed AirEnergy Storage system to Toronto’s electricity grid. HydroStor uses compressed air and the pressure of water to run its system, and produces zero emissions.
Toronto Hydro will evaluate the system during a two-year pilot project to see how well it performs.
For more information on how we're modernizing the grid visit www.torontohydro.com/gridinvestment.

Toronto Hydro has partnered with HydroStor Incorporated to connect the world’s first UnderwaterCompressed AirEnergy Storage system to Toronto’s electricity grid. HydroStor uses compressed air and the pressure of water to run its system, and produces zero emissions.
Toronto Hydro will evaluate the system during a two-year pilot project to see how well it performs.
For more information on how we're modernizing the grid visit www.torontohydro.com/gridinvestment.

Animated map shows the undersea cables that power the internet

Every time you visit a web page or send an email, data is being sent and received through an intricate cable system that stretches around the globe. Since the 1...

Every time you visit a web page or send an email, data is being sent and received through an intricate cable system that stretches around the globe. Since the 1850s, we've been laying cables across oceans to become better connected. Today, there are hundreds of thousands of miles of fiber optic cables constantly transmitting data between nations.
Subscribe to BI: Science - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9uD-W5zQHQuAVT2GdcLCvg
----------------------------------------­----------
Follow BI Video on Twitter: http://bit.ly/1oS68Zs
Follow BI Video On Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1bkB8qg
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/
----------------------------------------­----------
Business Insider is the fastest growing business news site in the US. Our mission: to tell you all you need to know about the big world around you. The BI Video team focuses on technology, strategy and science with an emphasis on unique storytelling and data that appeals to the next generation of leaders – the digital generation.

Every time you visit a web page or send an email, data is being sent and received through an intricate cable system that stretches around the globe. Since the 1850s, we've been laying cables across oceans to become better connected. Today, there are hundreds of thousands of miles of fiber optic cables constantly transmitting data between nations.
Subscribe to BI: Science - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9uD-W5zQHQuAVT2GdcLCvg
----------------------------------------­----------
Follow BI Video on Twitter: http://bit.ly/1oS68Zs
Follow BI Video On Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1bkB8qg
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/
----------------------------------------­----------
Business Insider is the fastest growing business news site in the US. Our mission: to tell you all you need to know about the big world around you. The BI Video team focuses on technology, strategy and science with an emphasis on unique storytelling and data that appeals to the next generation of leaders – the digital generation.

This Under Water Drone Conquers the Ocean... in 4K!

Get more info (and buy a PowerRay) HERE: https://store.us.powervision.me?ref=59cea99db6094
Explore the ocean with this NEW under-water Drone called the PowerRay...

Get more info (and buy a PowerRay) HERE: https://store.us.powervision.me?ref=59cea99db6094
Explore the ocean with this NEW under-water Drone called the PowerRay from the company PowerVision. This little guy can hang out underwater for 2 hours without needing to recharge, and can find fish, drop bate, and more importantly take some awesome video with its 4K stabilized camera.
Like I mention in the video, this makes a great underwater tool, BUT I would like it to have a side motor to push it along parallel to a subject that I am trying to film. It is amazing what technology can do. Exploring the Isla De Las mujeres, near Cancun, with an Underwater drone is pretty incredible.
Check out The Jurgys Vlog of our day!: https://youtu.be/mDApXzwA_UA
WhatsInside's Underwater Drone Vlog: https://youtu.be/xImdTUUzrso
More Power Vision stuff:
Instagram https://www.instagram.com/powervision.usa/
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/powervisionme/
Youtube http://www.youtube.com/c/PowerVisionGlobal
Awesome iPhone Tool Kit: http://amzn.to/2xu8VBL
Green Pry tool: http://amzn.to/1Tu57pI
Metal phone opening tool: http://amzn.to/1WdOFv0
The camera I used to film this video: http://amzn.to/2p7GtkX
The Lens I used for this video: http://amzn.to/1QOXDw2
Wide angle lens: http://amzn.to/2qiYM4u
And this Metabones adapter: http://amzn.to/2iZ67Ty
This is the drone I use: http://amzn.to/2joH00G
*Follow me for updates!*
Instagram: http://instagram.com/zacksjerryrig
Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1U4bQqv
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ZacksJerryRig
Snapchat: http://bit.ly/1UAb2Fq
GooglePlus: https://bit.ly/1YyKice
JerryRigEverything assumes no liability for property damage or injury incurred as a result of any of the information contained in this video. JerryRigEverything recommends safe practices when working with power tools, automotive lifts, lifting tools, jack stands, electrical equipment, blunt instruments, chemicals, lubricants, expensive electronics, or any other tools or equipment seen or implied in this video. Due to factors beyond the control of JerryRigEverything, no information contained in this video shall create any express or implied warranty or guarantee of any particular result. Any injury, damage or loss that may result from improper use of these tools, equipment, or the information contained in this video is the sole responsibility of the user and not JerryRigEverything. Only attempt your own repairs if you can accept personal responsibility for the results, whether they are good or bad.

Get more info (and buy a PowerRay) HERE: https://store.us.powervision.me?ref=59cea99db6094
Explore the ocean with this NEW under-water Drone called the PowerRay from the company PowerVision. This little guy can hang out underwater for 2 hours without needing to recharge, and can find fish, drop bate, and more importantly take some awesome video with its 4K stabilized camera.
Like I mention in the video, this makes a great underwater tool, BUT I would like it to have a side motor to push it along parallel to a subject that I am trying to film. It is amazing what technology can do. Exploring the Isla De Las mujeres, near Cancun, with an Underwater drone is pretty incredible.
Check out The Jurgys Vlog of our day!: https://youtu.be/mDApXzwA_UA
WhatsInside's Underwater Drone Vlog: https://youtu.be/xImdTUUzrso
More Power Vision stuff:
Instagram https://www.instagram.com/powervision.usa/
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/powervisionme/
Youtube http://www.youtube.com/c/PowerVisionGlobal
Awesome iPhone Tool Kit: http://amzn.to/2xu8VBL
Green Pry tool: http://amzn.to/1Tu57pI
Metal phone opening tool: http://amzn.to/1WdOFv0
The camera I used to film this video: http://amzn.to/2p7GtkX
The Lens I used for this video: http://amzn.to/1QOXDw2
Wide angle lens: http://amzn.to/2qiYM4u
And this Metabones adapter: http://amzn.to/2iZ67Ty
This is the drone I use: http://amzn.to/2joH00G
*Follow me for updates!*
Instagram: http://instagram.com/zacksjerryrig
Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1U4bQqv
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ZacksJerryRig
Snapchat: http://bit.ly/1UAb2Fq
GooglePlus: https://bit.ly/1YyKice
JerryRigEverything assumes no liability for property damage or injury incurred as a result of any of the information contained in this video. JerryRigEverything recommends safe practices when working with power tools, automotive lifts, lifting tools, jack stands, electrical equipment, blunt instruments, chemicals, lubricants, expensive electronics, or any other tools or equipment seen or implied in this video. Due to factors beyond the control of JerryRigEverything, no information contained in this video shall create any express or implied warranty or guarantee of any particular result. Any injury, damage or loss that may result from improper use of these tools, equipment, or the information contained in this video is the sole responsibility of the user and not JerryRigEverything. Only attempt your own repairs if you can accept personal responsibility for the results, whether they are good or bad.

published:29 Sep 2017

views:1837044

back

The Ocean Renewable Power Company is making undersea power generation a reality - SOLIDWORKS

The OceanRenewablePower Company is making undersea power generation a reality - SOLIDWORKS. When ChrisSauer's team at Ocean Renewable Power Company set out to build one of the world's first underwater turbines, they were doing something that had never been done before. SolidWorks ® helped turn their vision into reality.
See more stories like these on our Born to Design website! http://oak.ctx.ly/r/g1rp
Subscribe to our channel: http://goo.gl/z3rQfT
Visit our website: http://www.solidworks.com/
Follow us!
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/solidworks
Twitter: https://twitter.com/solidworks
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/5003792/

The OceanRenewablePower Company is making undersea power generation a reality - SOLIDWORKS. When ChrisSauer's team at Ocean Renewable Power Company set out to build one of the world's first underwater turbines, they were doing something that had never been done before. SolidWorks ® helped turn their vision into reality.
See more stories like these on our Born to Design website! http://oak.ctx.ly/r/g1rp
Subscribe to our channel: http://goo.gl/z3rQfT
Visit our website: http://www.solidworks.com/
Follow us!
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/solidworks
Twitter: https://twitter.com/solidworks
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/5003792/

Google is reinforcing its underwater fibre-optic cables to protect against future shark attacks
Google is reinforcing its private underwater fibre-optic cables with an extra layer of protective material in order to protect its 100,000 miles of cables from sharks.
Sharks and other fish are attracted to the cables, thought by some to be due to the electromagnetic signals emitted by the lines, but they are easily damaged. The cables already have existing protective materials designed to shelter them from the various dangers of the environment, but will now be coated with a 'Kevlar-like' material to provide even more protection.
Fibre-optic cables are made of strands of glass, and are thus much less durable than copper cables. Google wants to prevent its own cables from sustaining further damage after seeing underwater surveillance footage of sharks biting the cables.
IT Pro has contacted Google for more information on the plans and will update the story as soon as we know more.

Google is reinforcing its underwater fibre-optic cables to protect against future shark attacks
Google is reinforcing its private underwater fibre-optic cables with an extra layer of protective material in order to protect its 100,000 miles of cables from sharks.
Sharks and other fish are attracted to the cables, thought by some to be due to the electromagnetic signals emitted by the lines, but they are easily damaged. The cables already have existing protective materials designed to shelter them from the various dangers of the environment, but will now be coated with a 'Kevlar-like' material to provide even more protection.
Fibre-optic cables are made of strands of glass, and are thus much less durable than copper cables. Google wants to prevent its own cables from sustaining further damage after seeing underwater surveillance footage of sharks biting the cables.
IT Pro has contacted Google for more information on the plans and will update the story as soon as we know more.

An Australian company has been working on a system that uses underwater buoys to convert sea waves into zero-emission energy and desalinated water.
Australian ...

An Australian company has been working on a system that uses underwater buoys to convert sea waves into zero-emission energy and desalinated water.
Australian firm CarnegieWave Energy has been developing a system called CETO, which aims to utilise sea waves to generate power. Steel-made buoys that can currently generate 240 kilowatts are the main part of the system.
At the Australian naval base HMAS Stirling, three buoys are placed 11 kilometres apart. The buoys are less susceptible to extreme weather damage, while underwater waves are sufficient to generate power.
The buoys' pumps drive the high pressure water to an onshore power plant via a subsea pipe. The high pressure water spins the turbines, which then generate zero-carbon electricity.
The CETO system can be used to power a desalination plant as well. High pressure water can be utilised to remove salt from seawater through a permeable membrane in a process called reverse osmosis.
The Australian company believes that the cost of electricity generated by the CETO system will be competitive with diesel if it is deployed at a large scale.
----------------------------------------­---------------------
Welcome to TomoNews, where we animate the most entertaining news on the internets. Come here for an animated look at viral headlines, US news, celebrity gossip, salacious scandals, dumb criminals and much more! Subscribe now for daily news animations that will knock your socks off.
Visit our official website for all the latest, uncensored videos: http://us.tomonews.net
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Please watch: "Crying dog breaks the internet’s heart — but this sad dog story has a happy ending"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4prKTN9bYQc
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

An Australian company has been working on a system that uses underwater buoys to convert sea waves into zero-emission energy and desalinated water.
Australian firm CarnegieWave Energy has been developing a system called CETO, which aims to utilise sea waves to generate power. Steel-made buoys that can currently generate 240 kilowatts are the main part of the system.
At the Australian naval base HMAS Stirling, three buoys are placed 11 kilometres apart. The buoys are less susceptible to extreme weather damage, while underwater waves are sufficient to generate power.
The buoys' pumps drive the high pressure water to an onshore power plant via a subsea pipe. The high pressure water spins the turbines, which then generate zero-carbon electricity.
The CETO system can be used to power a desalination plant as well. High pressure water can be utilised to remove salt from seawater through a permeable membrane in a process called reverse osmosis.
The Australian company believes that the cost of electricity generated by the CETO system will be competitive with diesel if it is deployed at a large scale.
----------------------------------------­---------------------
Welcome to TomoNews, where we animate the most entertaining news on the internets. Come here for an animated look at viral headlines, US news, celebrity gossip, salacious scandals, dumb criminals and much more! Subscribe now for daily news animations that will knock your socks off.
Visit our official website for all the latest, uncensored videos: http://us.tomonews.net
Check out our Android app: http://bit.ly/1rddhCj
Check out our iOS app: http://bit.ly/1gO3z1f
Stay connected with us here:
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-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "Crying dog breaks the internet’s heart — but this sad dog story has a happy ending"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4prKTN9bYQc
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

Bizarre Underwater Discoveries

From amazing art to a mysterious train, these are 13 of the most bizarre underwater discoveries.
Subscribe to Talltanic http://goo.gl/wgfvrr
10. The Cancun...

From amazing art to a mysterious train, these are 13 of the most bizarre underwater discoveries.
Subscribe to Talltanic http://goo.gl/wgfvrr
10. The Cancun Underwater Museum has over 500 underwater sculptures dedicated to the Art of Conservation. The unique attraction offers divers a spectacular view of the statues that can be seen from a glass bottom boat. The museum began its venture in Cancun in 2009 and was completed in 2013. Each figure was made from a PH neutral cement, coral, seaweed and algae. The reason for this is to help benefit and protect coral reefs. Coral reefs can be created from sunken ships that fall to the bottom of the ocean floor. Creating statues are used to help save the ocean by creating a new way to grow coral reefs.
9. MS Zenobia was a Swedish ferry boat that sank on her maiden voyage in 1980 near Larnaca, Cyprus. After passing through the Strait of Gibraltar in route to Athens Greece the captain began to notice problems associated with steering. Once they arrived at Larnaca, the problem occurred again and the computerized pumping system was forcing additional water into the adjacent ballast tanks because of a software error. A few days after the ferry sank and sank in Larnaca Bay. Now it is a favorite dive site for visitors in Cyprus.
8. From land, the swimming whole Angelita looks like an average swimming hole. It is located in the Yucatan in Mexico. Divers have to plunge down to nearly 100 feet underwater to see the river. The “UnderwaterRiver,” is a cenote that is just an optical illusion produced by a cloud of hydrogen sulfide intermingling with the surrounding saltwater.
7. USS Oriskany is nicknamed the “Mighty O”. Was one of the small amount of Essex-class aircraft carriers finished only after World War II for the United States Navy. The ship was called for the Battle of Oriskany through the Revolutionary War. The aircraft carrier saw years of combat through both the Korean and Viet NamWars before the carrier was purposely sunk to become part of the world's largest artificial coral reef.
6. Several miles off New Jersey’s coast there lie an unanticipated site below the ocean’s surface. Two trains were found in 1985 but no one knows for sure how they got there. The most excepted theory behind how the locomotives got there is that in the 1850's the trains were being transported from the place they were built to their new home which was likely a rail yard. Because the locomotives were small, they could have been pushed overboard into the sea. Now the trains give an interesting spot for divers.
5. Yonaguni Monument is located off the coast of the Ryukyu Islands, in Japan. The monument is connected to a large rock mass in the ocean and believe to have been deposited over 20 million years ago. The main monument is a rectangular formation which measures 490 by 130 ft. The rock formation is made out of moderate to very fine sandstones and mudstones. Scientist who have studied the formation have concluded that some of the features could be manmade. One scientist believes that the site could be fragments of the legendary lost continent of Mu.
4. The SS President Coolidge was an ocean liner from the U.S. The large ship saw its nautical days finish after yielding to mines near the large military base on Espiritu Santo. Now the ship is used as a dive site. Divers can see a mostly intact cruise liner and a military ship. They can swim through numerous parts of the ship. There are guns, cannons, Jeeps, a stunning statue of "The Lady", chandeliers, and a mosaic tile fountain. Coral grows around the ocean liner where the divers can view sea creatures such as reef fish, barracuda, sea turtles and moray eels.
3. The Titanic, was the world’s largest cruise ship sank on her maiden voyage on April in 1912. The ship was touted as “unsinkable” and was supposed to be one of the safest ships ever built in history. She collided with an iceberg, and nearly half of the passengers lost their lives due to the inadequate supply of life boats on board.
2. The LionCity is a real life Atlantis located in China. The city was purposely flooded to make way for a build hydroelectric power station in 1959. Unfortunately, the city was forgotten but remains largely intact for being underwater for fifty years. Currently, there are plans in the works for divers because they like to use the metropolis to use as a tourist site.
1. SS Thistlegorm merchant ship that was sunk during World War II in the Red Sea. She set to sell for Alexandria, Egypt when two bombs were dropped on her from above. The bombs struck the stern of the ship, and it quickly sank. The ship and holds everything from vehicles, motorcycles, ammunition and other weaponry. Now the SS Thistlegorm is used as a recreational diving site.

From amazing art to a mysterious train, these are 13 of the most bizarre underwater discoveries.
Subscribe to Talltanic http://goo.gl/wgfvrr
10. The Cancun Underwater Museum has over 500 underwater sculptures dedicated to the Art of Conservation. The unique attraction offers divers a spectacular view of the statues that can be seen from a glass bottom boat. The museum began its venture in Cancun in 2009 and was completed in 2013. Each figure was made from a PH neutral cement, coral, seaweed and algae. The reason for this is to help benefit and protect coral reefs. Coral reefs can be created from sunken ships that fall to the bottom of the ocean floor. Creating statues are used to help save the ocean by creating a new way to grow coral reefs.
9. MS Zenobia was a Swedish ferry boat that sank on her maiden voyage in 1980 near Larnaca, Cyprus. After passing through the Strait of Gibraltar in route to Athens Greece the captain began to notice problems associated with steering. Once they arrived at Larnaca, the problem occurred again and the computerized pumping system was forcing additional water into the adjacent ballast tanks because of a software error. A few days after the ferry sank and sank in Larnaca Bay. Now it is a favorite dive site for visitors in Cyprus.
8. From land, the swimming whole Angelita looks like an average swimming hole. It is located in the Yucatan in Mexico. Divers have to plunge down to nearly 100 feet underwater to see the river. The “UnderwaterRiver,” is a cenote that is just an optical illusion produced by a cloud of hydrogen sulfide intermingling with the surrounding saltwater.
7. USS Oriskany is nicknamed the “Mighty O”. Was one of the small amount of Essex-class aircraft carriers finished only after World War II for the United States Navy. The ship was called for the Battle of Oriskany through the Revolutionary War. The aircraft carrier saw years of combat through both the Korean and Viet NamWars before the carrier was purposely sunk to become part of the world's largest artificial coral reef.
6. Several miles off New Jersey’s coast there lie an unanticipated site below the ocean’s surface. Two trains were found in 1985 but no one knows for sure how they got there. The most excepted theory behind how the locomotives got there is that in the 1850's the trains were being transported from the place they were built to their new home which was likely a rail yard. Because the locomotives were small, they could have been pushed overboard into the sea. Now the trains give an interesting spot for divers.
5. Yonaguni Monument is located off the coast of the Ryukyu Islands, in Japan. The monument is connected to a large rock mass in the ocean and believe to have been deposited over 20 million years ago. The main monument is a rectangular formation which measures 490 by 130 ft. The rock formation is made out of moderate to very fine sandstones and mudstones. Scientist who have studied the formation have concluded that some of the features could be manmade. One scientist believes that the site could be fragments of the legendary lost continent of Mu.
4. The SS President Coolidge was an ocean liner from the U.S. The large ship saw its nautical days finish after yielding to mines near the large military base on Espiritu Santo. Now the ship is used as a dive site. Divers can see a mostly intact cruise liner and a military ship. They can swim through numerous parts of the ship. There are guns, cannons, Jeeps, a stunning statue of "The Lady", chandeliers, and a mosaic tile fountain. Coral grows around the ocean liner where the divers can view sea creatures such as reef fish, barracuda, sea turtles and moray eels.
3. The Titanic, was the world’s largest cruise ship sank on her maiden voyage on April in 1912. The ship was touted as “unsinkable” and was supposed to be one of the safest ships ever built in history. She collided with an iceberg, and nearly half of the passengers lost their lives due to the inadequate supply of life boats on board.
2. The LionCity is a real life Atlantis located in China. The city was purposely flooded to make way for a build hydroelectric power station in 1959. Unfortunately, the city was forgotten but remains largely intact for being underwater for fifty years. Currently, there are plans in the works for divers because they like to use the metropolis to use as a tourist site.
1. SS Thistlegorm merchant ship that was sunk during World War II in the Red Sea. She set to sell for Alexandria, Egypt when two bombs were dropped on her from above. The bombs struck the stern of the ship, and it quickly sank. The ship and holds everything from vehicles, motorcycles, ammunition and other weaponry. Now the SS Thistlegorm is used as a recreational diving site.

China's Underwater High-Speed Train to America | China Uncensored

Who wants to take an underwater train ride to China?! China is planning to build a high-speed rail connecting China and the continental United States that will ...

Who wants to take an underwater train ride to China?! China is planning to build a high-speed rail connecting China and the continental United States that will tunnel under the 125 mile stretch of ocean beneath the Bering Strait. And that's just one of three other wacky ambitious plans they have that completely disregard the reality of the natural environment!
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Question and Answer
http://e.ntd.tv/1k5ceCe

Who wants to take an underwater train ride to China?! China is planning to build a high-speed rail connecting China and the continental United States that will tunnel under the 125 mile stretch of ocean beneath the Bering Strait. And that's just one of three other wacky ambitious plans they have that completely disregard the reality of the natural environment!
Subscribe for more China Uncensored:
http://www.youtube.com/ntdchinauncensored
Make sure to share with your friends!
______________________________
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Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/ChinaUncensored
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+NTDChinaUncensored/
______________________________
MOBILE LINKS:
China'sUnderwaterAtlantis
http://e.ntd.tv/1gC1F62
China's Water Crisis
http://e.ntd.tv/KluWGJ
Is Revolution Brewing in China?
http://e.ntd.tv/QRGKUE
Question and Answer
http://e.ntd.tv/1k5ceCe

The Longest Underwater Tunnel | China's Future MEGAPROJECTS: Part 5

China is building the world’s longest underwater tunnel beneath the Bohai Sea--at 76 miles long it will pass through two deadly earthquake fault zones, will be ...

China is building the world’s longest underwater tunnel beneath the Bohai Sea--at 76 miles long it will pass through two deadly earthquake fault zones, will be longer than the current first and second-ranked underwater tunnels combined and will cost $42 billion.
Subscribe to TDC for more videos like this:
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More information on the Bohai SeaTunnel:
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Video created by Bryce Plank

China is building the world’s longest underwater tunnel beneath the Bohai Sea--at 76 miles long it will pass through two deadly earthquake fault zones, will be longer than the current first and second-ranked underwater tunnels combined and will cost $42 billion.
Subscribe to TDC for more videos like this:
https://www.youtube.com/TheDailyConversation/
More information on the Bohai SeaTunnel:
https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Bohai_Strait_tunnel
Like our page on Facebookhttp://www.facebook.com/thedailyconversation
Join us on Google+
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Video created by Bryce Plank

World's Longest Underwater Gas Pipeline (Giant Serpent)

The LangeledPipeline project, spearheaded by Exxon Mobil, Stat Oil and Royal Dutch Shell, was undertaken to exploit one of the world's largest reservoirs of .
The Langeled pipeline (originally known as Britpipe) is an underwater pipeline transporting Norwegian natural gas to the United Kingdom. Before the .
This Channel is filled with a wide range of innovative and technological advancement that will trigger your mind and intellectual insights. Enjoy learning and .
The Langeled pipeline (originally known as Britpipe) is an underwater pipeline transporting Norwegian natural gas to the United Kingdom. Before the completio.

published: 10 Aug 2015

TechKnow - Deep sea gold rush

Oceans cover 70 percent of the earth's surface, but only a fraction of the undersea world has been explored.
On this episode of TechKnow, Phil Torres joins a team of scientists on a special expedition to explore and uncover the mysteries at the bottom of the ocean floor.
"What we are doing is similar to astronauts and planetary scientists just trying to study life on another planet," says BethOrcutt, a senior research scientist.
The journey begins in Costa Rica aboard the R/VAtlantis, a research vessel operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. From there, Phil gets the chance to take a dive with Alvin, a deep-water submersible capable of taking explorers down to 6,000 metres (20,000 feet) under the sea.
Commissioned in 1964, Alvin has a celebrated history, locating an une...

Just as microphones collect sound in the air, underwater hydrophones detect acoustic signals in the ocean. Most hydrophones are based on a special property (piezoelecticity) of certain ceramics that produce a small electrical current when subjected to pressure changes. When submerged in water, a ceramic hydrophone produces small-voltage signals over a wide range of frequencies as it is exposed to underwater sounds propagating from any direction. By amplifying and recording the electrical signals produced by a hydrophone, sound in the sea can be measured with great precision. Although a single hydrophone records sound arriving from any direction, several hydrophones can be simultaneously deployed in an array, and the resulting signals can then be manipulated to “listen” in any direction wit...

THE FIRST HALF-MILLION VOLT D.C. TRANSMISSION LINE (1965) (AAPG W3606/1161)

How electricity is fed to the Cook Strait submarine cable. Surveying for the line; building the bridges, roads, and camps needed; erecting a tower above Benmore dam; taking tow-ropes across country by hand and by tractor; and stringing and jointing conductors. 2K scan from 16mm print.

The Lost World Underwater - Documentary HD

Underwater Whale Sounds - Full 60 Minute Ambient Soundscape

Download the Mp3 version at: http://www.mindamend.com/yt/whale-sounds
► Subscribe to my channel and be updated with my latest tracks:
http://www.youtube.com/user/MindAmend?sub_confirmation=1
There's now an 8 hour alternative version of this whale sounds track here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDqP7kcr-sc
Note: This track does not contain any brainwave entrainment tones.
® Copyright MindAmend.com

published: 19 Feb 2013

AMAZING Secret Underwater Caves - Documentary HD

WELCOME to the Documentary TV!
SUBSCRIBE NOW! https://www.youtube.com/user/documentariesTV2014
With great new content coming out regularly subscribing will help you keep up to date!
If you love documentaries about wildlife, space, cars, knowledge, history and much more, this is the channel for you!
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and most of all ENJOY!

An alien structure has been discovered about 2,000 feet underwater, this area has now become a hotspot for UFO sightings. So much underwater UFO activity in one place is undeniably unusual and strongly points to the possibility that there is an underwater UFO base somewhere in this area. While the reports alone provide considerable evidence, further confirmation of this possibility comes from another source.
Not only is there an unusually large number of sightings, landings, and ocean-going UFOs here, there are also cases of abductions. Normally, when somebody reports being abducted by aliens, they claim to have been taken inside a UFO. However, in this particular area, some abductees report that they have been taken to what is apparently an underground base. Could it be that these witnes...

Also released in slightly different form as "Voice of the Deep". this vintage Moody Institute of Science film explores the nature of sound in the deep sea. The film charts the early use of undersea hydrophones to listen to sounds beneath the sea, and the invention of sonar at the 6:00 mark. At 6:17, hydrophones at Chesapeake Bay are shown in 1942, used for national defense, detecting croaker fish. At 7:58, Moody Science explorers are seen getting into a deep sea diving suit to record the first ever underwater sound motion picture. At 10:00, the University of Rhode Island's NarragansettMarine Laboratory is seen, cataloging hundreds of sounds made by different species using a spectrograph. At 13:40, dolphins are seen performing at Marineland, and a study shown of a dolphin's ability to d...

The LangeledPipeline project, spearheaded by Exxon Mobil, Stat Oil and Royal Dutch Shell, was undertaken to exploit one of the world's largest reservoirs of .
The Langeled pipeline (originally known as Britpipe) is an underwater pipeline transporting Norwegian natural gas to the United Kingdom. Before the .
This Channel is filled with a wide range of innovative and technological advancement that will trigger your mind and intellectual insights. Enjoy learning and .
The Langeled pipeline (originally known as Britpipe) is an underwater pipeline transporting Norwegian natural gas to the United Kingdom. Before the completio.

The LangeledPipeline project, spearheaded by Exxon Mobil, Stat Oil and Royal Dutch Shell, was undertaken to exploit one of the world's largest reservoirs of .
The Langeled pipeline (originally known as Britpipe) is an underwater pipeline transporting Norwegian natural gas to the United Kingdom. Before the .
This Channel is filled with a wide range of innovative and technological advancement that will trigger your mind and intellectual insights. Enjoy learning and .
The Langeled pipeline (originally known as Britpipe) is an underwater pipeline transporting Norwegian natural gas to the United Kingdom. Before the completio.

TechKnow - Deep sea gold rush

Oceans cover 70 percent of the earth's surface, but only a fraction of the undersea world has been explored.
On this episode of TechKnow, Phil Torres joins a t...

Oceans cover 70 percent of the earth's surface, but only a fraction of the undersea world has been explored.
On this episode of TechKnow, Phil Torres joins a team of scientists on a special expedition to explore and uncover the mysteries at the bottom of the ocean floor.
"What we are doing is similar to astronauts and planetary scientists just trying to study life on another planet," says BethOrcutt, a senior research scientist.
The journey begins in Costa Rica aboard the R/VAtlantis, a research vessel operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. From there, Phil gets the chance to take a dive with Alvin, a deep-water submersible capable of taking explorers down to 6,000 metres (20,000 feet) under the sea.
Commissioned in 1964, Alvin has a celebrated history, locating an unexploded hydrogen bomb off the coast of Spain and exploring the famous RMS Titanic in the 1980s.
Alvin and its first female pilot, CindyVan Dover, were the first to discover hydrothermal vents, which are underwater springs where plumes of black smoke and water pour out from underneath the earth's crust. The vents were inhabited by previously unknown organisms that thrived in the absence of sunlight.
After 40 years of exploration, Alvin got a high-tech upgrade. The storied submersible is now outfitted with high-resolution cameras to provide a 245-degree viewing field and a robotic arm that scientists can use to pull samples of rock and ocean life to then study back on land.
But scientists are not the only ones interested in the ocean. These days the new gold rush is not in the hills, it is in the deep sea. For thousands of years miners have been exploiting the earth in search of precious metals. As resources on dry land are depleted, now the search for new sources of metals and minerals is heading underwater.
The NationalOceanic and Atmospheric Administration's national ocean service estimates that there is more than $150tn in gold waiting to be mined from the floor of the world's oceans.
"The industry is moving very, very fast. They have far more financial resources than the scientific community," says Cindy Van Dover, Alvin's first female pilot and Duke University Oceanography Professor.
Seabed mining is still in the planning stages, but Nautilus Minerals, a Canadian mining company, says it has the technology and the contracts in place with the island nation of Papua New Guinea to start mining in its waters in about two years.
What is the future of seabed mining? And what are the consequences of seabed mining for the marine ecosystems? Can science and industry co-exist and work together on viable and sustainable solutions?
- Subscribe to our channel: http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check out our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

Oceans cover 70 percent of the earth's surface, but only a fraction of the undersea world has been explored.
On this episode of TechKnow, Phil Torres joins a team of scientists on a special expedition to explore and uncover the mysteries at the bottom of the ocean floor.
"What we are doing is similar to astronauts and planetary scientists just trying to study life on another planet," says BethOrcutt, a senior research scientist.
The journey begins in Costa Rica aboard the R/VAtlantis, a research vessel operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. From there, Phil gets the chance to take a dive with Alvin, a deep-water submersible capable of taking explorers down to 6,000 metres (20,000 feet) under the sea.
Commissioned in 1964, Alvin has a celebrated history, locating an unexploded hydrogen bomb off the coast of Spain and exploring the famous RMS Titanic in the 1980s.
Alvin and its first female pilot, CindyVan Dover, were the first to discover hydrothermal vents, which are underwater springs where plumes of black smoke and water pour out from underneath the earth's crust. The vents were inhabited by previously unknown organisms that thrived in the absence of sunlight.
After 40 years of exploration, Alvin got a high-tech upgrade. The storied submersible is now outfitted with high-resolution cameras to provide a 245-degree viewing field and a robotic arm that scientists can use to pull samples of rock and ocean life to then study back on land.
But scientists are not the only ones interested in the ocean. These days the new gold rush is not in the hills, it is in the deep sea. For thousands of years miners have been exploiting the earth in search of precious metals. As resources on dry land are depleted, now the search for new sources of metals and minerals is heading underwater.
The NationalOceanic and Atmospheric Administration's national ocean service estimates that there is more than $150tn in gold waiting to be mined from the floor of the world's oceans.
"The industry is moving very, very fast. They have far more financial resources than the scientific community," says Cindy Van Dover, Alvin's first female pilot and Duke University Oceanography Professor.
Seabed mining is still in the planning stages, but Nautilus Minerals, a Canadian mining company, says it has the technology and the contracts in place with the island nation of Papua New Guinea to start mining in its waters in about two years.
What is the future of seabed mining? And what are the consequences of seabed mining for the marine ecosystems? Can science and industry co-exist and work together on viable and sustainable solutions?
- Subscribe to our channel: http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check out our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

Just as microphones collect sound in the air, underwater hydrophones detect acoustic signals in the ocean. Most hydrophones are based on a special property (pie...

Just as microphones collect sound in the air, underwater hydrophones detect acoustic signals in the ocean. Most hydrophones are based on a special property (piezoelecticity) of certain ceramics that produce a small electrical current when subjected to pressure changes. When submerged in water, a ceramic hydrophone produces small-voltage signals over a wide range of frequencies as it is exposed to underwater sounds propagating from any direction. By amplifying and recording the electrical signals produced by a hydrophone, sound in the sea can be measured with great precision. Although a single hydrophone records sound arriving from any direction, several hydrophones can be simultaneously deployed in an array, and the resulting signals can then be manipulated to “listen” in any direction with even greater sensitivity than a single hydrophone element. Whether within an array or as a single element, the hydrophone is the basic sensor of underwater acoustics.
Currently, several technologies are available for acoustic exploration of the ocean. For decades, the U.S. Navy has used a device called a sonobuoy to record the sound of enemy submarines. This simple device can be deployed either from an aircraft or a surface ship. The sonobuoy includes a single underwater hydrophone and a radio transmitter to send the recorded signals back to the aircraft or ship. By deploying a pattern of sonobuoys, the location of the “target” can be determined. Sonobuoys have been used in ocean exploration as well, e.g., to record marine mammal calls and listen for earthquake activity, but the short life span of the device (a few hrs) prohibits long-term monitoring.
A much more expensive, but permanent, technology for acoustic exploration is the installation of a hydrophone array connected to an underwater communications cable. Since the 1960s, the U.S. Navy has operated such a SOund SUrveillance System (SOSUS) for military applications in many areas of the world ocean. With the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the end of the Cold War, the U.S. Navy offered the civilian scientific community “dual use” of SOSUS to evaluate its value in ocean environmental monitoring. Since 1991, NOAA has successfully used these arrays to detect submarine volcanic eruptions in the northeast Pacific and blue whale movements in the same area. The range of the system is such that volcanic tremors from south of Japan have been successfully detected and located using SOSUS arrays deployed off the coasts of Oregon and Washington. Access to SOSUS is restricted, both in the sense that the data are classified and can only be used in a secure facility, and also by the fact that the arrays are deployed only in areas of military need. The cabled nature of SOSUS allows real-time acquisition of the acoustic data, but at a high cost; the total investment in SOSUS is estimated at more than $16 billion. .
Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7eMdkXyqdVqwq8NG_uH5eA?sub_confirmation=1

Just as microphones collect sound in the air, underwater hydrophones detect acoustic signals in the ocean. Most hydrophones are based on a special property (piezoelecticity) of certain ceramics that produce a small electrical current when subjected to pressure changes. When submerged in water, a ceramic hydrophone produces small-voltage signals over a wide range of frequencies as it is exposed to underwater sounds propagating from any direction. By amplifying and recording the electrical signals produced by a hydrophone, sound in the sea can be measured with great precision. Although a single hydrophone records sound arriving from any direction, several hydrophones can be simultaneously deployed in an array, and the resulting signals can then be manipulated to “listen” in any direction with even greater sensitivity than a single hydrophone element. Whether within an array or as a single element, the hydrophone is the basic sensor of underwater acoustics.
Currently, several technologies are available for acoustic exploration of the ocean. For decades, the U.S. Navy has used a device called a sonobuoy to record the sound of enemy submarines. This simple device can be deployed either from an aircraft or a surface ship. The sonobuoy includes a single underwater hydrophone and a radio transmitter to send the recorded signals back to the aircraft or ship. By deploying a pattern of sonobuoys, the location of the “target” can be determined. Sonobuoys have been used in ocean exploration as well, e.g., to record marine mammal calls and listen for earthquake activity, but the short life span of the device (a few hrs) prohibits long-term monitoring.
A much more expensive, but permanent, technology for acoustic exploration is the installation of a hydrophone array connected to an underwater communications cable. Since the 1960s, the U.S. Navy has operated such a SOund SUrveillance System (SOSUS) for military applications in many areas of the world ocean. With the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the end of the Cold War, the U.S. Navy offered the civilian scientific community “dual use” of SOSUS to evaluate its value in ocean environmental monitoring. Since 1991, NOAA has successfully used these arrays to detect submarine volcanic eruptions in the northeast Pacific and blue whale movements in the same area. The range of the system is such that volcanic tremors from south of Japan have been successfully detected and located using SOSUS arrays deployed off the coasts of Oregon and Washington. Access to SOSUS is restricted, both in the sense that the data are classified and can only be used in a secure facility, and also by the fact that the arrays are deployed only in areas of military need. The cabled nature of SOSUS allows real-time acquisition of the acoustic data, but at a high cost; the total investment in SOSUS is estimated at more than $16 billion. .
Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7eMdkXyqdVqwq8NG_uH5eA?sub_confirmation=1

THE FIRST HALF-MILLION VOLT D.C. TRANSMISSION LINE (1965) (AAPG W3606/1161)

How electricity is fed to the Cook Strait submarine cable. Surveying for the line; building the bridges, roads, and camps needed; erecting a tower above Benmore...

How electricity is fed to the Cook Strait submarine cable. Surveying for the line; building the bridges, roads, and camps needed; erecting a tower above Benmore dam; taking tow-ropes across country by hand and by tractor; and stringing and jointing conductors. 2K scan from 16mm print.

How electricity is fed to the Cook Strait submarine cable. Surveying for the line; building the bridges, roads, and camps needed; erecting a tower above Benmore dam; taking tow-ropes across country by hand and by tractor; and stringing and jointing conductors. 2K scan from 16mm print.

Underwater Whale Sounds - Full 60 Minute Ambient Soundscape

Download the Mp3 version at: http://www.mindamend.com/yt/whale-sounds
► Subscribe to my channel and be updated with my latest tracks:
http://www.youtube.com/us...

Download the Mp3 version at: http://www.mindamend.com/yt/whale-sounds
► Subscribe to my channel and be updated with my latest tracks:
http://www.youtube.com/user/MindAmend?sub_confirmation=1
There's now an 8 hour alternative version of this whale sounds track here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDqP7kcr-sc
Note: This track does not contain any brainwave entrainment tones.
® Copyright MindAmend.com

Download the Mp3 version at: http://www.mindamend.com/yt/whale-sounds
► Subscribe to my channel and be updated with my latest tracks:
http://www.youtube.com/user/MindAmend?sub_confirmation=1
There's now an 8 hour alternative version of this whale sounds track here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDqP7kcr-sc
Note: This track does not contain any brainwave entrainment tones.
® Copyright MindAmend.com

AMAZING Secret Underwater Caves - Documentary HD

WELCOME to the Documentary TV!
SUBSCRIBE NOW! https://www.youtube.com/user/documentariesTV2014
With great new content coming out regularly subscribing will hel...

WELCOME to the Documentary TV!
SUBSCRIBE NOW! https://www.youtube.com/user/documentariesTV2014
With great new content coming out regularly subscribing will help you keep up to date!
If you love documentaries about wildlife, space, cars, knowledge, history and much more, this is the channel for you!
Like and Comment to share your experience with all our viewers!
and most of all ENJOY!

WELCOME to the Documentary TV!
SUBSCRIBE NOW! https://www.youtube.com/user/documentariesTV2014
With great new content coming out regularly subscribing will help you keep up to date!
If you love documentaries about wildlife, space, cars, knowledge, history and much more, this is the channel for you!
Like and Comment to share your experience with all our viewers!
and most of all ENJOY!

An alien structure has been discovered about 2,000 feet underwater, this area has now become a hotspot for UFO sightings. So much underwater UFO activity in one...

An alien structure has been discovered about 2,000 feet underwater, this area has now become a hotspot for UFO sightings. So much underwater UFO activity in one place is undeniably unusual and strongly points to the possibility that there is an underwater UFO base somewhere in this area. While the reports alone provide considerable evidence, further confirmation of this possibility comes from another source.
Not only is there an unusually large number of sightings, landings, and ocean-going UFOs here, there are also cases of abductions. Normally, when somebody reports being abducted by aliens, they claim to have been taken inside a UFO. However, in this particular area, some abductees report that they have been taken to what is apparently an underground base. Could it be that these witnesses were taken into the underwater base in the Santa Catalina channel?

An alien structure has been discovered about 2,000 feet underwater, this area has now become a hotspot for UFO sightings. So much underwater UFO activity in one place is undeniably unusual and strongly points to the possibility that there is an underwater UFO base somewhere in this area. While the reports alone provide considerable evidence, further confirmation of this possibility comes from another source.
Not only is there an unusually large number of sightings, landings, and ocean-going UFOs here, there are also cases of abductions. Normally, when somebody reports being abducted by aliens, they claim to have been taken inside a UFO. However, in this particular area, some abductees report that they have been taken to what is apparently an underground base. Could it be that these witnesses were taken into the underwater base in the Santa Catalina channel?

Also released in slightly different form as "Voice of the Deep". this vintage Moody Institute of Science film explores the nature of sound in the deep sea. The film charts the early use of undersea hydrophones to listen to sounds beneath the sea, and the invention of sonar at the 6:00 mark. At 6:17, hydrophones at Chesapeake Bay are shown in 1942, used for national defense, detecting croaker fish. At 7:58, Moody Science explorers are seen getting into a deep sea diving suit to record the first ever underwater sound motion picture. At 10:00, the University of Rhode Island's NarragansettMarine Laboratory is seen, cataloging hundreds of sounds made by different species using a spectrograph. At 13:40, dolphins are seen performing at Marineland, and a study shown of a dolphin's ability to distinguish items underwater is made using sonar. At 20:30, humpback whales are seen producing underwater calls. At 22:54, a Nagra or similar tape recorder is seen being used in the field to record underwater sound in the arctic.
In its conclusion, the film examines a whole series of conclusions that were wrong in "matters of life and death importance".
The Moody Institute of Science (MIS) was founded in 1945 by the Moody Bible Institute and Irwin A. Moon as an evangelical group that used science demonstrations to preach to the masses. A California pastor who had been using science experiments in his sermons since the early 1930s, Moon believed that the marvels of science provided visible evidence of a divine plan of creation. In the late 1940s, MIS—with Moon as their director—began producing a series of technologically innovative, often riveting, and always religiously motivated science and social studies films. These films provided a religious interpretation for science, offering their viewers—in the church as well as in the American military, the public school system, and industry—a glimpse of a natural world so complex that it could only be explained, according to the films' narrators, through the existence of a higher power or an intelligent designer. By 1956, these Creationist science films were used in 389 school systems in 46 states.
The Moody Institute of Science was a production company for pro-creationism and anti-science media, spun off from the fundamentalist Moody Bible Institute. Its successor is DiscoveryMedia. Moody's role in the history of creationism is underappreciated
We encourage viewers to add comments and, especially, to provide additional information about our videos by adding a comment! See something interesting? Tell people what it is and what they can see by writing something for example: "01:00:12:00 -- President Roosevelt is seen meeting with Winston Churchill at the Quebec Conference."
This film is part of the PeriscopeFilmLLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com

Also released in slightly different form as "Voice of the Deep". this vintage Moody Institute of Science film explores the nature of sound in the deep sea. The film charts the early use of undersea hydrophones to listen to sounds beneath the sea, and the invention of sonar at the 6:00 mark. At 6:17, hydrophones at Chesapeake Bay are shown in 1942, used for national defense, detecting croaker fish. At 7:58, Moody Science explorers are seen getting into a deep sea diving suit to record the first ever underwater sound motion picture. At 10:00, the University of Rhode Island's NarragansettMarine Laboratory is seen, cataloging hundreds of sounds made by different species using a spectrograph. At 13:40, dolphins are seen performing at Marineland, and a study shown of a dolphin's ability to distinguish items underwater is made using sonar. At 20:30, humpback whales are seen producing underwater calls. At 22:54, a Nagra or similar tape recorder is seen being used in the field to record underwater sound in the arctic.
In its conclusion, the film examines a whole series of conclusions that were wrong in "matters of life and death importance".
The Moody Institute of Science (MIS) was founded in 1945 by the Moody Bible Institute and Irwin A. Moon as an evangelical group that used science demonstrations to preach to the masses. A California pastor who had been using science experiments in his sermons since the early 1930s, Moon believed that the marvels of science provided visible evidence of a divine plan of creation. In the late 1940s, MIS—with Moon as their director—began producing a series of technologically innovative, often riveting, and always religiously motivated science and social studies films. These films provided a religious interpretation for science, offering their viewers—in the church as well as in the American military, the public school system, and industry—a glimpse of a natural world so complex that it could only be explained, according to the films' narrators, through the existence of a higher power or an intelligent designer. By 1956, these Creationist science films were used in 389 school systems in 46 states.
The Moody Institute of Science was a production company for pro-creationism and anti-science media, spun off from the fundamentalist Moody Bible Institute. Its successor is DiscoveryMedia. Moody's role in the history of creationism is underappreciated
We encourage viewers to add comments and, especially, to provide additional information about our videos by adding a comment! See something interesting? Tell people what it is and what they can see by writing something for example: "01:00:12:00 -- President Roosevelt is seen meeting with Winston Churchill at the Quebec Conference."
This film is part of the PeriscopeFilmLLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com

The Channel Tunnel (French: Le tunnel sous la Manche; also nicknamed and shortened to Chunnel)[2][3] is a 50.5-kilometre (31.4 mi) rail tunnel linking Folkestone, Kent, in the United Kingdom, with Coquelles, Pas-de-Calais, near Calais in northern France, beneath the English Channel at the Strait of Dover. At its lowest point, it is 75 m (250 ft) deep.[4][5][6] At 37.9 kilometres (23.5 mi), the tunnel has the longest undersea portion of any tunnel in the world, although the Seikan Tunnel in Japan is both longer overall at 53.85 kilometres (33.46 mi) and deeper at 240 metres (790 ft) below sea level. The speed limit in the tunnel is 160 kilometres per hour (99 mph).[7]
The tunnel carries high-speed Eurostar passenger trains, the Eurotunnel Shuttle for road vehicles—the largest such transport in the world[8]—and international freight trains.[9] The tunnel connects end-to-end with the LGVNord and High Speed 1 high-speed railway lines.
Ideas for a cross-Channel fixed link appeared as early as 1802,[10][11] but British political and press pressure over the compromising of national security stalled attempts to construct a tunnel.[12] An early attempt at building a Channel Tunnel was made in the late 19th century, on the English side "in the hope of forcing the hand of the English Government".[13] The eventual successful project, organised by Eurotunnel, began construction in 1988 and opened in 1994. At £4.65 billion, the project came in 80% over its predicted budget.[14] Since its construction, the tunnel has faced several problems. Both fires and cold weather have disrupted its operation.[15][16] Illegal immigrants have attempted to use the tunnel to enter the UK,[17] causing a minor diplomatic disagreement over the siting of the refugee camp at Sangatte, which was eventually closed in 2002.

The Channel Tunnel (French: Le tunnel sous la Manche; also nicknamed and shortened to Chunnel)[2][3] is a 50.5-kilometre (31.4 mi) rail tunnel linking Folkestone, Kent, in the United Kingdom, with Coquelles, Pas-de-Calais, near Calais in northern France, beneath the English Channel at the Strait of Dover. At its lowest point, it is 75 m (250 ft) deep.[4][5][6] At 37.9 kilometres (23.5 mi), the tunnel has the longest undersea portion of any tunnel in the world, although the Seikan Tunnel in Japan is both longer overall at 53.85 kilometres (33.46 mi) and deeper at 240 metres (790 ft) below sea level. The speed limit in the tunnel is 160 kilometres per hour (99 mph).[7]
The tunnel carries high-speed Eurostar passenger trains, the Eurotunnel Shuttle for road vehicles—the largest such transport in the world[8]—and international freight trains.[9] The tunnel connects end-to-end with the LGVNord and High Speed 1 high-speed railway lines.
Ideas for a cross-Channel fixed link appeared as early as 1802,[10][11] but British political and press pressure over the compromising of national security stalled attempts to construct a tunnel.[12] An early attempt at building a Channel Tunnel was made in the late 19th century, on the English side "in the hope of forcing the hand of the English Government".[13] The eventual successful project, organised by Eurotunnel, began construction in 1988 and opened in 1994. At £4.65 billion, the project came in 80% over its predicted budget.[14] Since its construction, the tunnel has faced several problems. Both fires and cold weather have disrupted its operation.[15][16] Illegal immigrants have attempted to use the tunnel to enter the UK,[17] causing a minor diplomatic disagreement over the siting of the refugee camp at Sangatte, which was eventually closed in 2002.

Underwater Energy Storage in Toronto

Toronto Hydro has partnered with HydroStor Incorporated to connect the world’s first UnderwaterCompressed AirEnergy Storage system to Toronto’s electricity grid. HydroStor uses compressed air and the pressure of water to run its system, and produces zero emissions.
Toronto Hydro will evaluate the system during a two-year pilot project to see how well it performs.
For more information on how we're modernizing the grid visit www.torontohydro.com/gridinvestment.

2:23

Animated map shows the undersea cables that power the internet

Every time you visit a web page or send an email, data is being sent and received through ...

Animated map shows the undersea cables that power the internet

Every time you visit a web page or send an email, data is being sent and received through an intricate cable system that stretches around the globe. Since the 1850s, we've been laying cables across oceans to become better connected. Today, there are hundreds of thousands of miles of fiber optic cables constantly transmitting data between nations.
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7:18

This Under Water Drone Conquers the Ocean... in 4K!

Get more info (and buy a PowerRay) HERE: https://store.us.powervision.me?ref=59cea99db6094...

This Under Water Drone Conquers the Ocean... in 4K!

Get more info (and buy a PowerRay) HERE: https://store.us.powervision.me?ref=59cea99db6094
Explore the ocean with this NEW under-water Drone called the PowerRay from the company PowerVision. This little guy can hang out underwater for 2 hours without needing to recharge, and can find fish, drop bate, and more importantly take some awesome video with its 4K stabilized camera.
Like I mention in the video, this makes a great underwater tool, BUT I would like it to have a side motor to push it along parallel to a subject that I am trying to film. It is amazing what technology can do. Exploring the Isla De Las mujeres, near Cancun, with an Underwater drone is pretty incredible.
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4:32

The Ocean Renewable Power Company is making undersea power generation a reality - SOLIDWORKS

The Ocean Renewable Power Company is making undersea power generation a reality - SOLIDWOR...

The Ocean Renewable Power Company is making undersea power generation a reality - SOLIDWORKS

The OceanRenewablePower Company is making undersea power generation a reality - SOLIDWORKS. When ChrisSauer's team at Ocean Renewable Power Company set out to build one of the world's first underwater turbines, they were doing something that had never been done before. SolidWorks ® helped turn their vision into reality.
See more stories like these on our Born to Design website! http://oak.ctx.ly/r/g1rp
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6:19

What's inside the Undersea Internet Cable?

DID YOU KNOW there are over 250 internet cables under the oceans of the world?!?! We CUT I...

Shark Bites Fiber Optic Cables Undersea 15.8.2014

Google is reinforcing its underwater fibre-optic cables to protect against future shark attacks
Google is reinforcing its private underwater fibre-optic cables with an extra layer of protective material in order to protect its 100,000 miles of cables from sharks.
Sharks and other fish are attracted to the cables, thought by some to be due to the electromagnetic signals emitted by the lines, but they are easily damaged. The cables already have existing protective materials designed to shelter them from the various dangers of the environment, but will now be coated with a 'Kevlar-like' material to provide even more protection.
Fibre-optic cables are made of strands of glass, and are thus much less durable than copper cables. Google wants to prevent its own cables from sustaining further damage after seeing underwater surveillance footage of sharks biting the cables.
IT Pro has contacted Google for more information on the plans and will update the story as soon as we know more.

An Australian company has been working on a system that uses underwater buoys to convert sea waves into zero-emission energy and desalinated water.
Australian firm CarnegieWave Energy has been developing a system called CETO, which aims to utilise sea waves to generate power. Steel-made buoys that can currently generate 240 kilowatts are the main part of the system.
At the Australian naval base HMAS Stirling, three buoys are placed 11 kilometres apart. The buoys are less susceptible to extreme weather damage, while underwater waves are sufficient to generate power.
The buoys' pumps drive the high pressure water to an onshore power plant via a subsea pipe. The high pressure water spins the turbines, which then generate zero-carbon electricity.
The CETO system can be used to power a desalination plant as well. High pressure water can be utilised to remove salt from seawater through a permeable membrane in a process called reverse osmosis.
The Australian company believes that the cost of electricity generated by the CETO system will be competitive with diesel if it is deployed at a large scale.
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6:17

Bizarre Underwater Discoveries

From amazing art to a mysterious train, these are 13 of the most bizarre underwater discov...

Bizarre Underwater Discoveries

From amazing art to a mysterious train, these are 13 of the most bizarre underwater discoveries.
Subscribe to Talltanic http://goo.gl/wgfvrr
10. The Cancun Underwater Museum has over 500 underwater sculptures dedicated to the Art of Conservation. The unique attraction offers divers a spectacular view of the statues that can be seen from a glass bottom boat. The museum began its venture in Cancun in 2009 and was completed in 2013. Each figure was made from a PH neutral cement, coral, seaweed and algae. The reason for this is to help benefit and protect coral reefs. Coral reefs can be created from sunken ships that fall to the bottom of the ocean floor. Creating statues are used to help save the ocean by creating a new way to grow coral reefs.
9. MS Zenobia was a Swedish ferry boat that sank on her maiden voyage in 1980 near Larnaca, Cyprus. After passing through the Strait of Gibraltar in route to Athens Greece the captain began to notice problems associated with steering. Once they arrived at Larnaca, the problem occurred again and the computerized pumping system was forcing additional water into the adjacent ballast tanks because of a software error. A few days after the ferry sank and sank in Larnaca Bay. Now it is a favorite dive site for visitors in Cyprus.
8. From land, the swimming whole Angelita looks like an average swimming hole. It is located in the Yucatan in Mexico. Divers have to plunge down to nearly 100 feet underwater to see the river. The “UnderwaterRiver,” is a cenote that is just an optical illusion produced by a cloud of hydrogen sulfide intermingling with the surrounding saltwater.
7. USS Oriskany is nicknamed the “Mighty O”. Was one of the small amount of Essex-class aircraft carriers finished only after World War II for the United States Navy. The ship was called for the Battle of Oriskany through the Revolutionary War. The aircraft carrier saw years of combat through both the Korean and Viet NamWars before the carrier was purposely sunk to become part of the world's largest artificial coral reef.
6. Several miles off New Jersey’s coast there lie an unanticipated site below the ocean’s surface. Two trains were found in 1985 but no one knows for sure how they got there. The most excepted theory behind how the locomotives got there is that in the 1850's the trains were being transported from the place they were built to their new home which was likely a rail yard. Because the locomotives were small, they could have been pushed overboard into the sea. Now the trains give an interesting spot for divers.
5. Yonaguni Monument is located off the coast of the Ryukyu Islands, in Japan. The monument is connected to a large rock mass in the ocean and believe to have been deposited over 20 million years ago. The main monument is a rectangular formation which measures 490 by 130 ft. The rock formation is made out of moderate to very fine sandstones and mudstones. Scientist who have studied the formation have concluded that some of the features could be manmade. One scientist believes that the site could be fragments of the legendary lost continent of Mu.
4. The SS President Coolidge was an ocean liner from the U.S. The large ship saw its nautical days finish after yielding to mines near the large military base on Espiritu Santo. Now the ship is used as a dive site. Divers can see a mostly intact cruise liner and a military ship. They can swim through numerous parts of the ship. There are guns, cannons, Jeeps, a stunning statue of "The Lady", chandeliers, and a mosaic tile fountain. Coral grows around the ocean liner where the divers can view sea creatures such as reef fish, barracuda, sea turtles and moray eels.
3. The Titanic, was the world’s largest cruise ship sank on her maiden voyage on April in 1912. The ship was touted as “unsinkable” and was supposed to be one of the safest ships ever built in history. She collided with an iceberg, and nearly half of the passengers lost their lives due to the inadequate supply of life boats on board.
2. The LionCity is a real life Atlantis located in China. The city was purposely flooded to make way for a build hydroelectric power station in 1959. Unfortunately, the city was forgotten but remains largely intact for being underwater for fifty years. Currently, there are plans in the works for divers because they like to use the metropolis to use as a tourist site.
1. SS Thistlegorm merchant ship that was sunk during World War II in the Red Sea. She set to sell for Alexandria, Egypt when two bombs were dropped on her from above. The bombs struck the stern of the ship, and it quickly sank. The ship and holds everything from vehicles, motorcycles, ammunition and other weaponry. Now the SS Thistlegorm is used as a recreational diving site.

5:25

Ocean Energy - Tidal Current Turbine

Voith Hydro (www.voith.com) developed a turbine for the utilization of tidal currents. An...

China's Underwater High-Speed Train to America | China Uncensored

Who wants to take an underwater train ride to China?! China is planning to build a high-speed rail connecting China and the continental United States that will tunnel under the 125 mile stretch of ocean beneath the Bering Strait. And that's just one of three other wacky ambitious plans they have that completely disregard the reality of the natural environment!
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30:21

MyStartup.Live w/ Thomas Peters of Undersea Energy

MyStartup.Live featuring Thomas Peters of Undersea Energy. Recorded live July 21, 2017.

The Longest Underwater Tunnel | China's Future MEGAPROJECTS: Part 5

China is building the world’s longest underwater tunnel beneath the Bohai Sea--at 76 miles long it will pass through two deadly earthquake fault zones, will be longer than the current first and second-ranked underwater tunnels combined and will cost $42 billion.
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Video created by Bryce Plank

World's Longest Underwater Gas Pipeline (Giant Serpent)

The LangeledPipeline project, spearheaded by Exxon Mobil, Stat Oil and Royal Dutch Shell, was undertaken to exploit one of the world's largest reservoirs of .
The Langeled pipeline (originally known as Britpipe) is an underwater pipeline transporting Norwegian natural gas to the United Kingdom. Before the .
This Channel is filled with a wide range of innovative and technological advancement that will trigger your mind and intellectual insights. Enjoy learning and .
The Langeled pipeline (originally known as Britpipe) is an underwater pipeline transporting Norwegian natural gas to the United Kingdom. Before the completio.

23:43

TechKnow - Deep sea gold rush

Oceans cover 70 percent of the earth's surface, but only a fraction of the undersea world ...

TechKnow - Deep sea gold rush

Oceans cover 70 percent of the earth's surface, but only a fraction of the undersea world has been explored.
On this episode of TechKnow, Phil Torres joins a team of scientists on a special expedition to explore and uncover the mysteries at the bottom of the ocean floor.
"What we are doing is similar to astronauts and planetary scientists just trying to study life on another planet," says BethOrcutt, a senior research scientist.
The journey begins in Costa Rica aboard the R/VAtlantis, a research vessel operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. From there, Phil gets the chance to take a dive with Alvin, a deep-water submersible capable of taking explorers down to 6,000 metres (20,000 feet) under the sea.
Commissioned in 1964, Alvin has a celebrated history, locating an unexploded hydrogen bomb off the coast of Spain and exploring the famous RMS Titanic in the 1980s.
Alvin and its first female pilot, CindyVan Dover, were the first to discover hydrothermal vents, which are underwater springs where plumes of black smoke and water pour out from underneath the earth's crust. The vents were inhabited by previously unknown organisms that thrived in the absence of sunlight.
After 40 years of exploration, Alvin got a high-tech upgrade. The storied submersible is now outfitted with high-resolution cameras to provide a 245-degree viewing field and a robotic arm that scientists can use to pull samples of rock and ocean life to then study back on land.
But scientists are not the only ones interested in the ocean. These days the new gold rush is not in the hills, it is in the deep sea. For thousands of years miners have been exploiting the earth in search of precious metals. As resources on dry land are depleted, now the search for new sources of metals and minerals is heading underwater.
The NationalOceanic and Atmospheric Administration's national ocean service estimates that there is more than $150tn in gold waiting to be mined from the floor of the world's oceans.
"The industry is moving very, very fast. They have far more financial resources than the scientific community," says Cindy Van Dover, Alvin's first female pilot and Duke University Oceanography Professor.
Seabed mining is still in the planning stages, but Nautilus Minerals, a Canadian mining company, says it has the technology and the contracts in place with the island nation of Papua New Guinea to start mining in its waters in about two years.
What is the future of seabed mining? And what are the consequences of seabed mining for the marine ecosystems? Can science and industry co-exist and work together on viable and sustainable solutions?
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Just as microphones collect sound in the air, underwater hydrophones detect acoustic signals in the ocean. Most hydrophones are based on a special property (piezoelecticity) of certain ceramics that produce a small electrical current when subjected to pressure changes. When submerged in water, a ceramic hydrophone produces small-voltage signals over a wide range of frequencies as it is exposed to underwater sounds propagating from any direction. By amplifying and recording the electrical signals produced by a hydrophone, sound in the sea can be measured with great precision. Although a single hydrophone records sound arriving from any direction, several hydrophones can be simultaneously deployed in an array, and the resulting signals can then be manipulated to “listen” in any direction with even greater sensitivity than a single hydrophone element. Whether within an array or as a single element, the hydrophone is the basic sensor of underwater acoustics.
Currently, several technologies are available for acoustic exploration of the ocean. For decades, the U.S. Navy has used a device called a sonobuoy to record the sound of enemy submarines. This simple device can be deployed either from an aircraft or a surface ship. The sonobuoy includes a single underwater hydrophone and a radio transmitter to send the recorded signals back to the aircraft or ship. By deploying a pattern of sonobuoys, the location of the “target” can be determined. Sonobuoys have been used in ocean exploration as well, e.g., to record marine mammal calls and listen for earthquake activity, but the short life span of the device (a few hrs) prohibits long-term monitoring.
A much more expensive, but permanent, technology for acoustic exploration is the installation of a hydrophone array connected to an underwater communications cable. Since the 1960s, the U.S. Navy has operated such a SOund SUrveillance System (SOSUS) for military applications in many areas of the world ocean. With the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the end of the Cold War, the U.S. Navy offered the civilian scientific community “dual use” of SOSUS to evaluate its value in ocean environmental monitoring. Since 1991, NOAA has successfully used these arrays to detect submarine volcanic eruptions in the northeast Pacific and blue whale movements in the same area. The range of the system is such that volcanic tremors from south of Japan have been successfully detected and located using SOSUS arrays deployed off the coasts of Oregon and Washington. Access to SOSUS is restricted, both in the sense that the data are classified and can only be used in a secure facility, and also by the fact that the arrays are deployed only in areas of military need. The cabled nature of SOSUS allows real-time acquisition of the acoustic data, but at a high cost; the total investment in SOSUS is estimated at more than $16 billion. .
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THE FIRST HALF-MILLION VOLT D.C. TRANSMISSION LINE (1965) (AAPG W3606/1161)

How electricity is fed to the Cook Strait submarine cable. Surveying for the line; building the bridges, roads, and camps needed; erecting a tower above Benmore dam; taking tow-ropes across country by hand and by tractor; and stringing and jointing conductors. 2K scan from 16mm print.

1:04:54

The Lost World Underwater - Documentary HD

The Lost World - Documentary HD
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Underwater Whale Sounds - Full 60 Minute Ambient Soundscape

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AMAZING Secret Underwater Caves - Documentary HD

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An alien structure has been discovered about 2,000 feet underwater, this area has now become a hotspot for UFO sightings. So much underwater UFO activity in one place is undeniably unusual and strongly points to the possibility that there is an underwater UFO base somewhere in this area. While the reports alone provide considerable evidence, further confirmation of this possibility comes from another source.
Not only is there an unusually large number of sightings, landings, and ocean-going UFOs here, there are also cases of abductions. Normally, when somebody reports being abducted by aliens, they claim to have been taken inside a UFO. However, in this particular area, some abductees report that they have been taken to what is apparently an underground base. Could it be that these witnesses were taken into the underwater base in the Santa Catalina channel?

Also released in slightly different form as "Voice of the Deep". this vintage Moody Institute of Science film explores the nature of sound in the deep sea. The film charts the early use of undersea hydrophones to listen to sounds beneath the sea, and the invention of sonar at the 6:00 mark. At 6:17, hydrophones at Chesapeake Bay are shown in 1942, used for national defense, detecting croaker fish. At 7:58, Moody Science explorers are seen getting into a deep sea diving suit to record the first ever underwater sound motion picture. At 10:00, the University of Rhode Island's NarragansettMarine Laboratory is seen, cataloging hundreds of sounds made by different species using a spectrograph. At 13:40, dolphins are seen performing at Marineland, and a study shown of a dolphin's ability to distinguish items underwater is made using sonar. At 20:30, humpback whales are seen producing underwater calls. At 22:54, a Nagra or similar tape recorder is seen being used in the field to record underwater sound in the arctic.
In its conclusion, the film examines a whole series of conclusions that were wrong in "matters of life and death importance".
The Moody Institute of Science (MIS) was founded in 1945 by the Moody Bible Institute and Irwin A. Moon as an evangelical group that used science demonstrations to preach to the masses. A California pastor who had been using science experiments in his sermons since the early 1930s, Moon believed that the marvels of science provided visible evidence of a divine plan of creation. In the late 1940s, MIS—with Moon as their director—began producing a series of technologically innovative, often riveting, and always religiously motivated science and social studies films. These films provided a religious interpretation for science, offering their viewers—in the church as well as in the American military, the public school system, and industry—a glimpse of a natural world so complex that it could only be explained, according to the films' narrators, through the existence of a higher power or an intelligent designer. By 1956, these Creationist science films were used in 389 school systems in 46 states.
The Moody Institute of Science was a production company for pro-creationism and anti-science media, spun off from the fundamentalist Moody Bible Institute. Its successor is DiscoveryMedia. Moody's role in the history of creationism is underappreciated
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The Channel Tunnel Documentary History

The Channel Tunnel (French: Le tunnel sous la Manche; also nicknamed and shortened to Chunnel)[2][3] is a 50.5-kilometre (31.4 mi) rail tunnel linking Folkestone, Kent, in the United Kingdom, with Coquelles, Pas-de-Calais, near Calais in northern France, beneath the English Channel at the Strait of Dover. At its lowest point, it is 75 m (250 ft) deep.[4][5][6] At 37.9 kilometres (23.5 mi), the tunnel has the longest undersea portion of any tunnel in the world, although the Seikan Tunnel in Japan is both longer overall at 53.85 kilometres (33.46 mi) and deeper at 240 metres (790 ft) below sea level. The speed limit in the tunnel is 160 kilometres per hour (99 mph).[7]
The tunnel carries high-speed Eurostar passenger trains, the Eurotunnel Shuttle for road vehicles—the largest such transport in the world[8]—and international freight trains.[9] The tunnel connects end-to-end with the LGVNord and High Speed 1 high-speed railway lines.
Ideas for a cross-Channel fixed link appeared as early as 1802,[10][11] but British political and press pressure over the compromising of national security stalled attempts to construct a tunnel.[12] An early attempt at building a Channel Tunnel was made in the late 19th century, on the English side "in the hope of forcing the hand of the English Government".[13] The eventual successful project, organised by Eurotunnel, began construction in 1988 and opened in 1994. At £4.65 billion, the project came in 80% over its predicted budget.[14] Since its construction, the tunnel has faced several problems. Both fires and cold weather have disrupted its operation.[15][16] Illegal immigrants have attempted to use the tunnel to enter the UK,[17] causing a minor diplomatic disagreement over the siting of the refugee camp at Sangatte, which was eventually closed in 2002.

28:39

The Largest Submarine in The U.S. Navy

USS Pennsylvania is a United States Navy Ohio-class ballistic missile submarine which has ...

The Channel Tunnel Documentary History...

The Largest Submarine in The U.S. Navy...

It turns out that a theory explaining how we might detect parallel universes and prediction for the end of the world was proposed and completed by physicist Stephen Hawking shortly before he died ... &nbsp;. According to reports, the work predicts that the universe would eventually end when stars run out of energy ... ....

Using e-cigarettes may lead to an accumulation of fat in the liver, a study of mice exposed to the devices suggests. “The popularity of electronic cigarettes has been rapidly increasing in part because of advertisements that they are safer than conventional cigarettes ... Friedman of Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science in Los Angeles, California ... Circadian rhythm dysfunction is known to accelerate liver disease....

Tokyo. Japan’s embattled prime minister hit back today at critics over a favouritism and cover-up scandal that has seen his popularity plunge and loosened his iron grip on power. In a hotly awaited statement in parliament, Shinzo Abe stressed he had not ordered bureaucrats to alter documents relating to a controversial land sale as he comes under mounting pressure over the scandal ...AFP Read More ....

CAIRO (AP) — Egypt’s military says four troops and 36 Islamic militants have died in the past five days of fighting in the restive Sinai Peninsula. Monday’s statement says one officer was among the four killed army personnel ... ....

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GE plans to build the world’s largest offshore wind turbines, which are so tall they would dominate Melbourne's skyline. The wind towers will stand 260 metres tall, almost the same height as the Sydney Tower or 120 Collins Street in Melbourne and well above the world’s current largest wind turbines at 247m ... The offshore wind turbines are nearly 300 metres tall ... The world’s current largest wind turbine capacity is only 9 megawatts....

Chinese startup Techrules said it has been in advanced talks with General Motors, which is one of the latest carmakers to show interest in its micro-turbine powertrain that will be mass-produced from 2019 onwards ... According to the company, its powertrain features a micro-turbine. The turbine charges a battery pack and the pack powers electric motors that drive the wheels, thus slashing fuel consumption....

The Blackstone facility –initially owned and operated by AmericanNational Power – is a 570-megawatt power plant utilizing two gas turbines that employ sequential combustion technology to reduce nitrogen oxide emissions, compared to traditional power plants....

ISLAMABAD ... It means that the country may not be rid of loadshedding this summer ... Late delivery of gas turbines, combustion seal leak with vibrations and calibrations issues at one of the turbines at Bhikki and severe damage caused to a turbine at Haveli Bahadur Shah are some of the major factors that had already contributed to commercial production delays ... Later on the third one also developed some faults ... The PLLMD’s letter says ... ....

ISLAMABAD ... It means that the country may not be rid of loadshedding this summer ... Late delivery of gas turbines, combustion seal leak with vibrations and calibrations issues at one of the turbines at Bhikki and severe damage caused to a turbine at Haveli Bahadur Shah are some of the major factors that had already contributed to commercial production delays ... Later on the third one also developed some faults ... The PLLMD’s letter says ... ....

One of the world’s largest wind turbine manufacturers, Enercon, is using MasoSine SPS sinusoidal pumps from Watson-Marlow FluidTechnologyGroup to optimise the delivery of protective impregnating resin at its Magdeburg production facility in Germany... Among the core wind turbine components produced at Magdeburg is the ring generator, which during operation is exposed to particularly high stresses....

NEW DELHI... The Suzlon will install 238 units of S111 140m wind turbine generators (WTGs) with rated capacity of 2.1 MW each, Suzlon said in a statement, adding that the projects will be located at Kutch district in Gujarat ... ....